May 27, 2011

SL Joint? OHHHHHHHHHH SI Joint *LOL* Too funny!




Now I need to websurf hunter's bump!  I looked all over for SL *LOL*  I was thinking suspensory ligament??? The joint???? Then when I realized you meant SI *ding ding ding! Sacroiliac.  I will look at that tomorrow.  Is that only evident when the horse is in motion or at rest too? 
           ~E.G.

5 comments:

  1. Forgive me, but I'm confused by what you're looking at in the picture? And I'm unfamilar with the SL joint. I know someone mentioned the SI joint in the comments to the previous post; that's located in the croup area. That's where Huck had his injury, the muscles supporting the SI joint.

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  2. LOL! That was why I was asking. I thought she was meaning the suspensory ligament (and pastern joint capsule) SL not SI (I take it that is sacroiliac? Yes? No? now that makes sense ☺

    I'm glad I don't have a mouth full of coffee, it would have been all over the screen.

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  3. Star has a " jumpers hump" and shes never jumped a fence a day in her life. She gets chiro three times a year and that keeps in in check .My mae is a conformation train wreck if you will, but I loves her anyway!

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  4. Yeah... sorry bout that :-) SI is Sacro-Iliac. Could be the little mare is just very goose-rumped. That can kind of look like a hunter's bump in pics sometimes. What I'm looking at is the sort of pointy lump on the top of her hind end just behind the saddle. I'm wondering if she has a bit of a weak loin too, from the looks of the way the back of the saddle is sitting.

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  5. The arab gelding I rode for 8 years/2,000 miles had a recurring "hunter bump" which was prominent when his spine was out of whack; he needed chiro 4-5 times a year (minimum) to keep him moving correctly.

    So...not a "strike out" necessarily, but something to consider.

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