Case records of all Thoroughbred racehorses admitted to Newmarket Equine Hospital for evaluation of a parasagittal fracture of the proximal phalanx during a 5 years period were reviewed.
Follow-up data regarding racing careers was collected for horses that underwent repair.
Following exclusion of outliers, cases with incomplete data sets and comminuted fractures, mixed effect logistic regression was used to identify variables affecting returning to racing and odds ratios and confidence intervals calculated.
Of 113 repaired cases, fracture configurations included short incomplete parasagittal (n = 12), long incomplete parasagittal (n = 86), complete parasagittal (n = 12) and comminuted (n = 3).
A total of 54 (48%) cases raced after surgery. Horses that fractured at 2 years of age had increased odds of racing following surgery than those older than 2 years of age (OR 1.34; 95% CI 1.13–1.59, P = 0.002).
Horses sustaining short incomplete parasagittal fractures had increased odds of racing following surgery compared with those with complete parasagittal fractures (OR 2.62; 95% CI 1.36–5.07, P = 0.006). No horses with comminuted fractures returned to racing.
Approximately half of the cases in this series raced following surgical repair.
More 2-year-old horses raced following surgery, but this likely reflects horses, specifically older horses, passing out of training from unrelated factors.
Fracture configuration affects odds of racing, which is relevant to owners when deciding on treatment.
Source: Smith, M. R. W., Corletto, F. C. and Wright, I. M. (2017), Parasagittal fractures of the proximal phalanx in Thoroughbred racehorses in the UK: Outcome of repaired fractures in 113 cases (2007–2011). Equine Veterinary Journal. doi: 10.1111/evj.12707
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