Barbaro's Legacy
The effort to save the fallen champion shows how far equine medicine has come in recent years. And how far it still has to go
- By Steve Twomey
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2007, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 9)
But Richardson had an ally, a narrow, stainless-steel bar with 16 threaded screw holes. Inserting plates with screws beneath the skin to stabilize human bones is common, and it's been done as long as 35 years in horses. But in the past few years, Synthes Inc. of West Chester, Pennsylvania, has developed the locking compression plate (LCP), a particularly secure and effective type. No equine surgeon had more experience with it than Richardson.
Using an LCP about 12 inches long, as well as about a dozen independent screws and a cast on the outside, the veterinarian methodically reestablished a solid bone network in more than five hours of surgery. Steven Zedler, another surgical resident who assisted, said the process was a "piece-by-piece, step-by-step thing, ‘Yeah, I'll take that and screw it to that.'" Richardson had to fuse both the fetlock and pastern joints, though that would mean Barbaro would walk awkwardly. At no point, Richardson said, did he see any sign of preexisting bone damage. On the contrary, the staggering amount of breakage suggested "a very significant misstep."
No plate can hold the weight of a horse indefinitely by itself. And infection under and around it is always a threat. The hope was that the leg would heal and resume supporting Barbaro before either metal fatigue or infection became a problem. The overhead monorail took him to the recovery pool. In public comments during the next few days, Richardson made no promises. The horse had a fifty-fifty chance, no more. If those odds seemed low, Richardson was acutely aware that laminitis could undercut the surgical work.
For surgeons, is that prospect irritating?
"Irritating"? Richardson repeated, as if to say you're joking.
More like maddening.
On July 10, after weeks of good news about Barbaro's recovery, Roy Jackson telephoned his wife from an office he keeps near their home. He told her Richardson wanted them at New Bolton, immediately. Barbaro had laminitis as bad as a horse can have it. "To me, it was the kiss of death," Gretchen said. "So I went over there to say goodbye to him, basically."
A horse's feet are complex marvels, because the animal moves on its toes, like a ballerina. Each leg ends in a single digit called the coffin bone. That digit is surrounded by the hoof, which is the equivalent of a toenail that completely encircles the toe. In the middle, between coffin bone and hoof wall, are two layers of laminae.
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Comments (2)
This article brought back so many memories of Barbaro and his fight for life. I never saw Barbaro in person, but I felt as if I knew a little part of him because of following his fight. When I first saw Barbaro in the paddock before the Kentucky Derby, I thought that he was the most beautiful horse that I had ever seen. His life lesson to me is to always try, to never give up, to keep trying because there may be a bright light just around the corner. Because of Barbaro and the Jacksons, much good has happened and is happening. Long Live Barbaro's Legacy!! WELL DONE BARBARO!!
Posted by Martha Kinkead on June 24,2011 | 12:31 PM
I'm looking for a way to obtain permission from photographer Eliot J. Schechter to copy the picture of Barbaro's head used on the cover of My Guy Barbaro. I'm a quilter and would so like to use this picture as a model for a small wall hanging. It is for myself as I so loved Barbaro, but it might appear in a few local competitive quilt shows. I will never sell it. I would do the work in hand applique --- a technique called "pictorial" which uses tiny pieces to achieve the shading in the photograph. Thank you so much. Carol Schwankl
Posted by Carol Schwankl on April 30,2008 | 10:38 AM