Hard to believe, isn't it?
Remember the Flying Solo
Test Of Horse Ownership Preparedness? Oh yes, we're at it again. Actually, when I called my insurer to give them a heads-up on what was going on, I swear I heard them sigh in despair when I said NC State. They just sent me the kick injury check last week. They are not thinking I am a good investment at the moment.
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All surfaces hoseable... |
Since Encore was NQR (Not Quite Right, for the uninitiated) at our lesson, I followed David's advice and so today found us meeting with the head orthopedic diagnostic guru at NC State University's veterinary hospital. He and his flock of undervets and minions flexed and jogged and watched Encore under saddle and videoed and scribbled. Oh, and this was all around 1:30ish. Our appt and arrival time was at
10:30 am. Ha.
I had given Guru a strict lecture -- I am a state employee and Encore IS insured, but there is still a 30% copays for diagnostics. Guru turned to his head undervet and said, "what would you recommend for this horse?"
Undervet replies as dreaded: "Bone scan. But I think it's going to be a hard sell."
"Why is that?" asks Guru, "Just because it's money out of her pocket?"
Gee, thanks, man. Oh well, just fix my horse.
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The equine version of those little bracelets |
Guru did agree with my assessment that Encore's limbs were fine, but there was something going on higher up. And he wanted to scan his whole body since that pesky little LF limp step was showing up -- it's been there since the beginning, but I figured it was a bad foot thing and it goes away after a few minutes of warmup.
I did tell them that I already have radiographs of his front feet and his hind leg where he was kicked, so there's something...and I just paid his insurance deductible thanks to the lovely kick injury.
I wasn't alone though -- a girl just a bit younger than me was handgrazing her horse on the front lawn as I walked by and asked me beggingly, "Please tell me good news! I just need to hear someone has good news."
"Sorry," I sadly replied, "I have none. Horse ownership is pretty much a period of dealing with issues punctuated by brief interludes of bliss doing what you actually love."
We sighed together.
So Encore must stay in the hospital until Friday and will be released once he is no longer radioactive. If you are curious about bone scans, you can read the l
ayperson version here or the
total science nerd version here.
I had read about bone scans and the procedure, but I suppose I hadn't really processed that I would have to leave him there and drive home with an empty trailer. Undervet apparently recognized the blind panic on my face and suddenly became a great deal gentler.
"Don't worry," he said, "We'll take very good care of him and we will call you with any updates and before he goes in for scanning." He took down feeding notes and had I been a bit younger, he might have patted me on the head.
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Do not like. Take home now, please. |
I went to say goodbye to Encore, who kept trying to sneak out the door in a nervous lunge to
please not stay here, mum! I gave him a hug and told him to be a good boy and promised I was coming back for him (ok, maybe I cried a little, but no one saw it so it can never be proven) and took a deep breath and walked away. It was a very loooong walk back to the trailer, with a brief pause at the checkout to give away a massive sum of invisible money.
They tell me images will be available on Friday morning, so we will know more then. I have fearful suspicions, but hope that they are very wrong. I do want something to show up though, because if it doesn't show up on a bone scan, that means it's soft tissue, which is far harder to pinpoint and treat.
All around though, I can assure you, hospitals still suck no matter what species you are. At least in a person hospital, it's just me that's nervous. In the horse hospital, I am nervous, Encore is nervous, then I am trying to be not nervous so he will not feed off my nervousness, then I get nervous that he looks more nervous...really, they should just give out Xanax at the door and be done with it!