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Thoracic Sling and Hoof Growth

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What if the reason a horse's hoof won't balance is not a farriery problem — but a whole-body problem rooted in the thoracic sling? That is the provocative and clinically compelling question at the heart of this thesis by David Harrison Schaefer, a practising farrier who undertook equine osteopathy training at LCAO and discovered that the two disciplines are far more intertwined than most practitioners realise. The thoracic sling — the muscular system that suspends the horse's forelimb from the thorax — plays a direct role in dictating the forces applied to the hoof. When asymmetry or restriction exists within this complex, one limb effectively becomes "higher" than the other, altering load distribution across the entire distal limb. The hoof, which like bone responds to the forces placed upon it by growing more material in areas of lower stress, compensates accordingly — often producing excessive heel growth, toe stunting, or medial-lateral imbalance that resists conventional farriery. Schaefer builds his argument through anatomy, biomechanics, and a detailed case study of Shine, a 12-year-old Missouri Fox Trotter whose right forelimb deterioration was traced back to a diagonal compensatory pattern following an old left hind injury. Over three osteopathic sessions across eighteen weeks — combining indirect techniques, Osteopathic Articular Balancing, and visceral work addressing the lung pleura — Shine's thoracic sling restrictions were progressively cleared, allowing his hoof growth to normalise in a way that farriery alone had been unable to achieve. Perhaps most striking is Schaefer's attention to the often-overlooked organ component of sling dysfunction: fascial restrictions in the visceral pleura, the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, and the autonomic nervous system all feature in his analysis. His conclusion is clear — treating the hoof without treating the whole horse is an incomplete solution, and the collaboration of osteopath and farrier is essential to achieving lasting change.

March 20, 2026
Written by:
David Harrison Schaefer
Graduate Int´l Diploma in Equine Osteopathy
Certified Journeyman Farrier
United States
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