Sacroiliac joint dysfunction sits at the intersection of frustration and complexity in equine practice. Horses are stoic creatures — pain is masked, subtle gait changes are dismissed as training problems, and by the time a diagnosis is confirmed, the damage is often well established. This thesis by Emma Ramanathan asks a question that reframes the conversation entirely: what if we stopped waiting for dysfunction to appear and started preventing it from developing in the first place? Ramanathan focuses on three distinct causes of sacroiliac joint dysfunction — trauma, repetitive use and conformation — and examines how osteopathic care might reduce both the likelihood and severity of each. The sacroiliac joint, connecting the spine to the pelvis via dense, inelastic ligaments, has remarkably limited movement yet bears enormous force during locomotion. When that system is compromised, the consequences ripple throughout the entire musculoskeletal chain. The thesis draws on a combination of published research and personal clinical experience, including two horses from Ramanathan's own yard. These case studies ground the academic argument in lived reality, illustrating what it looks like when osteopathy is integrated as a long-term maintenance strategy rather than a crisis response. One horse, written off at seven years old, went on to compete at elementary dressage following osteopathic intervention. What emerges is a nuanced picture. Osteopathy cannot prevent a horse from slipping in a field, nor alter the structural facts of straight hocks or a long back. But it can, the thesis argues, build a body better equipped to cope — one where compensatory patterns are caught early, muscle balance is maintained, and recovery from injury is faster and more complete. Ramanathan also draws on a 2025 peer-reviewed study showing measurable improvements in hindlimb movement patterns following a single osteopathic treatment. This is a thesis about prevention as a clinical strategy, and it makes a compelling case for treating the horse before it breaks down rather than after.








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