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OMT for Sacroiliac Rehab

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Sacroiliac injury is one of the more elusive diagnoses in equine practice. The region sits deep beneath large muscle masses, the clinical signs are often ambiguous, and the gold-standard diagnostic tool — nuclear scintigraphy — sits behind a cost barrier that many owners cannot cross. The result is that a significant number of horses with chronic hindlimb lameness carry an unconfirmed sacroiliac component, managed as best they can be with the tools available. Katalin Kincses-Jánosi writes from a dual position of authority — a veterinarian with a PhD who has also trained as an equine osteopath. Her thesis opens with a scholarly review of sacroiliac anatomy, clinical presentation, diagnostic approaches and rehabilitation principles, before narrowing into a case study that brings all of that knowledge to bear on a single patient: a senior chestnut Hungarian halfbred mare with persistent low-to-medium grade left hindlimb lameness. The mare had already undergone arthroscopy for a separate stifle issue. The lameness remained. A subsequent diagnosis of fibrotic myopathy of the hamstrings added further complexity, and it was into this layered clinical picture that osteopathic manual treatment was introduced. Over a series of sessions spanning several months, Kincses-Jánosi documents her findings in detail — pelvic hypermobility, gluteal sensitivity, lumbar stiffness, asymmetrical rib cage response — and records the specific techniques applied, from whole-body osteoarticular balancing to strain-counterstrain on acupressure points to high-velocity low-amplitude pelvic manipulation. Woven through the treatment sessions is a progressively evolving exercise programme: dynamic mobilisation of the back, pelvic flexion work, ground pole sequences and lateral movement exercises, each calibrated to the mare's capacity at each stage and designed to build the deep stabilising musculature that the sacroiliac region depends upon. What makes this thesis genuinely instructive is its honesty. Progress was not linear — an early introduction of cross-country terrain exercises temporarily worsened the lameness. The author reflects on why, adjusts, and continues. For practitioners working with complex, long-standing cases in older horses, this is an account worth reading in full.

April 13, 2026
Written by:
Katalin Kincses-Jánosi
Graduate PG Diploma in Equine Osteopathy
Veterinary Surgeon
Hungary
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