2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2010.00243.x
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Heel movement in horses: comparison between glued and nailed horse shoes at different speeds

Abstract: SummaryReasons for performing study: It has been suggested that the heel of the horse's hoof expands in the stance phase and this reduces the concussion at impact and helps pump blood into the hoof. Therefore, farriers usually leave a gap in the heel region when using the traditional nailed shoe. Recently glued shoes which are attached firmly to the heel have been developed and these could restrict heel movement.

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Cited by 28 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Placing a shoe elevates the hoof off the ground surface by loading the hoof wall; this elevation results in less heel expansion compared with the unshod foot (Roepstorff et al 2001). Glued aluminium shoes restrict heel movement even further and potentially interfere with shock absorption (Yoshihara et al 2010). The process of hoof growth and wear will often allow the barefoot horse to maintain the shape of its feet as friction and thus wear occurs between the ground and the entire solar surface of the foot.…”
Section: The Effect Of Applying a Horseshoementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Placing a shoe elevates the hoof off the ground surface by loading the hoof wall; this elevation results in less heel expansion compared with the unshod foot (Roepstorff et al 2001). Glued aluminium shoes restrict heel movement even further and potentially interfere with shock absorption (Yoshihara et al 2010). The process of hoof growth and wear will often allow the barefoot horse to maintain the shape of its feet as friction and thus wear occurs between the ground and the entire solar surface of the foot.…”
Section: The Effect Of Applying a Horseshoementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Glued aluminium shoes restrict heel movement even further and potentially interfere with shock absorption (Yoshihara et al . ). The process of hoof growth and wear will often allow the barefoot horse to maintain the shape of its feet as friction and thus wear occurs between the ground and the entire solar surface of the foot.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The foot is a major study topic and work ranges from the assessment of the effect of hoof conformation [17] and the clinical consequences of uneven feet [18] to work on high‐speed field kinematics in elite Thoroughbreds using sophisticated equipment [19]. The effects of various types of shoeing have been heavily researched since the start of veterinary medicine as a science, but most progress dates from more recent years, thanks to the technological developments that have enabled measuring of the very fast motion and high‐impact and high‐frequency loading of the equine hoof [20,21]. Directly related is the work on hoof–surface interaction, a very important but long‐neglected area with respect to injury prevention.…”
Section: Applied Biomechanical Research Related To the Horsementioning
confidence: 99%
“…In order to meet these needs, horses were selected early on for their shod with the two types of horse shoes within the larger study set up. While many synthetic shoes are glued to the hoof, and this may alter the heel movement [22], a shoe, which could be secured on the hoof using nails similar to the standard steel shoe, was chosen. Therefore, the standard carriage shoes traditionally used were compared to a modern steel shoe also nailed to the hoof but whose ground surface is covered with polyurethane.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%