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Barbaro has another significant setback (Fox alert: euthanized this morning - see #60)
Yahoo (AP) ^ | 1/28/07

Posted on 01/28/2007 3:00:36 PM PST by HairOfTheDog

By RICHARD ROSENBLATT, AP Racing Writer 40 minutes ago

Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro suffered another significant setback over the weekend, and his fight for survival may have reached a critical point. After Barbaro developed a deep abscess in his right hind foot, surgery was performed Saturday to insert two steel pins in a bone, one that was shattered but now healthy, to eliminate all weight bearing on the ailing foot.

The procedure is a risky one, because it transfers more weight to the leg. If the bone were to break again, chief surgeon Dr. Dean Richardson said: "I think we'll quit.

"When things start to go bad, it's like a house of cards," he said Sunday in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. "If one thing fails, that puts more stress on another part. And if that fails, then you're stuck with managing two problems. That's why these are difficult cases."

The right rear leg was on the mend until recently. It's the one Barbaro shattered at the start of the Preakness Stakes eight months ago, and the three broken bones had completely healed.

Now this. The surgery, in which a cast was removed and replaced by an external brace known as a skeletal fixation device, addresses one problem but could create others.

Barbaro likely will have to bear more weight on his front feet because of his two ailing back legs, making him more susceptible to laminitis, a painful and often fatal disease caused by uneven weight distribution. Laminitis already struck Barbaro's left rear foot in July, and 80 percent of the hoof was removed.

"It's something that we are watching closely, and that could also be a thing that could lead to us quitting," Richardson said.

The colt was doing well Sunday, according to Richardson, and "we will continue to treat Barbaro aggressively as long as he remains bright, alert and eating," he said in an update sent out by the University of Pennsylvania's New Bolton Center in Kennett Square, Pa.

Based on Richardson's advice, owners Roy and Gretchen Jackson have been making the decisions concerning Barbaro. Their major concern from the start has been to keep Barbaro comfortable.

"No one is interested in putting the horse through any type of misery," Richardson said. "We're going to treat him the best way we can as long as he stays comfortable. And we're going to stick with that no matter if his chances are 1 percent or 90 percent.

"If he gets to the point where we just don't think it's reasonable to go on, we will not go on."

Gretchen Jackson spent time with Barbaro on Sunday, and said her colt is "still bright-eyed and still eating.

"It's not over 'til it's over," she said. "I'd say he's comfortable and being treated very well. As long as he's comfortable ... Dean knows our feelings. We trust him."

After months of upbeat progress reports, Barbaro has endured several setbacks the past three weeks.

On Jan. 9, Barbaro had a cast placed on his left rear leg to help realign a bone. The next day, Richardson removed damaged tissue from the colt's left rear hoof, and Barbaro was placed in a sling to help him keep weight off his feet.

On Jan. 13, another section of his left rear hoof was removed, and a cast was placed back on his right hind leg for additional support. He was gradually improving, but last Thursday, Barbaro's left rear cast was replaced and a custom-made plastic and steel brace was applied to his right hind leg. The leg also was fitted with a special orthotic brace for more support.

In the latest setback, the right hind leg is again at risk.

The pins in the right rear leg are connected to an external brace, which is connected to a lightweight alloy foot plate. This results "in the horse eliminating all weight bearing from the foot," Richardson said Sunday in a statement. "The horse's weight is borne through the pins across his cannon bone."

Allowing the pins to bear weight carries "significant risk."

"We believed it was our only option given the worsening of the right hind foot problem," Richardson said in a statement. "Unfortunately, we felt we needed to take this risk because this approach offered our only hope of keeping Barbaro acceptably comfortable."

He explained Barbaro had been uncomfortable on his right hind foot because of an abscess that developed when the horse had a "period of discomfort" on the left hind foot.

"It is not laminitis, but the undermining of the sole and part of the lateral heel region are potentially just as serious," Richardson said.

Sunday, Richardson sounded as serious as he did on May 21, the day after the Preakness, when he delivered the news that Barbaro's chance of survival was a "coin toss."

"I'm upset, worried, not sleeping well," he said. "A lot of people are very, very committed and spent a huge amount of emotional sources on this horse. So it's very upsetting when things go badly."


TOPICS: Breaking News
KEYWORDS: barbaro; euthenizemeanskill; verbalobsfuscation
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To: RunningWolf

this is why they put horses down in the first place......


41 posted on 01/29/2007 12:33:50 AM PST by cherry
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To: cherry

I'm curious if you've ever had to make surgical decisions regarding your own horse, that would have life threatening implications? I know I have and it's not easy. There's a lot of second guessing regarding the stress for everyone, including the horse. I lost mine after 4 days of a good fight and a five digit vet bill. But others have lived when it was thought all hope was lost.


42 posted on 01/29/2007 4:07:26 AM PST by cjshapi (Proudly posting without a tagline since 2001)
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To: pabianice

I don't think it was greed.


43 posted on 01/29/2007 7:40:50 AM PST by mel
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To: Renegade

It has to be natural no artificial insemination


44 posted on 01/29/2007 7:41:19 AM PST by mel
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To: Empress

How much longer do you think this can go on?
He is a beautiful horse, but seems hopeless now


45 posted on 01/29/2007 7:43:14 AM PST by mel
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To: mel

Good question. Since I'm neither one of his vets nor on the spot, it's hard to say. I have no doubt that they will continue to make decisions that are in Barbaro's best interest, though. Clearly, he must be giving them enough reason to believe that he wants to go on. Even if his owners *were* motivated by greed (which I don't believe for an instant), there is far too much pressure on them to give up and put him down for them not to do so as soon as the situation really is hopeless. Personally, I'm still rooting for him.


46 posted on 01/29/2007 7:58:35 AM PST by Empress (an equal-opportunity absolute dictator.)
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To: HairOfTheDog

Fox News Alert just now: Barbaro has been euthanized this morning in Philadelphia...


47 posted on 01/29/2007 9:29:42 AM PST by cgk (I don't see myself as a conservative. I see myself as a religious, right-wing, wacko extremist.)
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To: cgk
"Fox News Alert just now: Barbaro has been euthanized this morning in Philadelphia"

Very sad indeed, a real battler
48 posted on 01/29/2007 9:39:45 AM PST by DAC21
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To: HairOfTheDog
Poor guy! :-( At least everybody who loved him did their best.
49 posted on 01/29/2007 9:42:48 AM PST by Lockbar (March toward the sound of the guns.)
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To: DAC21

The owners must be devastated. They did what they could for the fellow. So sad.


50 posted on 01/29/2007 9:43:10 AM PST by Blogger
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To: DAC21

So sad! I wonder what happened to lead them to decide this? Last I heard they had put a brace-type thing on the leg that had the cast on.


51 posted on 01/29/2007 9:44:58 AM PST by Abigail Adams
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To: onyx; oceanview; beyond the sea; Rte66; DollyCali; snugs; All
Just heartsick .. what an incredibly valiant fight. You're free, brave guy. Gallop through the gates of the Rainbow Bridge to your heavenly pasture. Tears.


52 posted on 01/29/2007 9:46:03 AM PST by STARWISE (They (Rats) think of this WOT as Bush's war, not America's war-RichardMiniter, respected OBL author)
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To: cgk
How very sad. I was pullin' for this beautiful guy.

Just... sad.

53 posted on 01/29/2007 9:48:20 AM PST by AnnaZ (I keep 2 magnums in my desk.One's a gun and I keep it loaded.Other's a bottle and it keeps me loaded)
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To: Blogger

So sad. I was really rooting for him. :-(


54 posted on 01/29/2007 9:49:17 AM PST by ShandaLear (Perfect People Need Support, too.)
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To: STARWISE

Totally sad.


55 posted on 01/29/2007 9:49:20 AM PST by onyx (DEFEAT Hillary Clinton, Marxist, student of Saul Alinsky & ally and beneficiary of Soros.)
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To: Blogger

They went way above and beyond the call of duty.

This weekend a couple "observer" vets were saying that he was still in excellent spirits and maintained "the desire to live", but that this new splint on the right leg had a strong possibility of causing a new fracture.

Don't know if that's what happened (we'll find out soon enough), but RIP Barbaro.


56 posted on 01/29/2007 9:50:12 AM PST by angkor
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To: AnnaZ

Bump.


57 posted on 01/29/2007 9:51:53 AM PST by Howlin (The GOP RATS - Republicans Against Total Success (Howie66))
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To: HairOfTheDog

Barbaro was a good boy.


58 posted on 01/29/2007 9:52:14 AM PST by GinaLolaB
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To: HairOfTheDog
I don't have to be Nostradamus to tell where this thread will end up:

TS -- AB

59 posted on 01/29/2007 9:52:20 AM PST by The KG9 Kid
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To: Howlin

Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro euthanized

Barbaro, winner of the Kentucky Derby Presented by Yum! Brands (G1) whose battle to overcome injuries suffered in the Preakness Stakes (G1) attracted worldwide attention and a legion of fans, was euthanized on Monday morning at the University of Pennsylvania’s New Bolton Center.

Gretchen Jackson, who owned and bred the Dynaformer colt along with her husband, Roy, said that Barbaro’s front feet were beginning to become affected by the limited ability of both his laminitic left hind foot and his fused right limb that was shattered in the Preakness Stakes to bear weight.

The decision was made early Monday after consulting with Dean Richardson, D.V.M., chief surgeon at the University of Pennsylvania’s veterinary school.

“There was not a foot that was not affected,” Gretchen Jackson said. “He just would not lie down. He had not layed down for two days now. That can’t be good for him. He’s got to get the weight off of his feet. They were bringing him in and out of the sling, but his front feet were showing signs of laminitic changes and we just thought rather than put him through any more else. He had been good up to the beginning of this month, and then everything went.”

Barbaro, who became the sixth undefeated Derby winner in history when he won the 2006 Derby by 6 1/2 lengths, demonstrated considerable discomfort on his right hind foot over the weekend and underwent surgery to insert two pins in his right hind cannon bone in an effort to eliminate all weight bearing from the right foot on Saturday. The procedure was described as a last ditch effort to keep Barbaro comfortable enough to continue his recovery.

“Dean said, ‘The good stuff takes a long time, and the bad goes fast,’ “ Gretchen Jackson said. “That seems like that’s what it was, it went really fast. We all are really, really confident that he didn’t suffer. We know that he was pain free and we just didn’t ever want to see him…it’s an issue of pain and quality of life. If it’s not going to happen, it’s just not going to happen. We just owed it to him to give him the best.”

http://www.thoroughbredtimes.com/nat...uthanized.aspx


60 posted on 01/29/2007 9:52:23 AM PST by Help!
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