Hock Arthritis in Horses
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Hock Arthritis in Horses: When to Consider Joint Fusion (Arthrodesis)
By Dr Duncan Houston
If your horse keeps improving after hock injections but then relapses, you are likely dealing with a joint that needs a different strategy.
Lower hock arthritis is one of the most common causes of hind limb lameness in performance horses. Early on, it can be managed. But in more advanced cases, repeated treatments stop lasting.
This is where many horses sit in a frustrating cycle of temporary relief.
The key shift is understanding when to stop managing inflammation and start removing the source of pain altogether.
Quick Answer
Lower hock arthritis causes pain from movement within low-motion joints. When medical treatments stop working, arthrodesis, or joint fusion, can eliminate pain by permanently stopping movement in those joints. Ethyl alcohol injections offer a minimally invasive way to achieve this in suitable cases.
What Is Lower Hock Arthritis
The hock contains multiple joints, but the ones most commonly affected are:
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distal intertarsal joint
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tarsometatarsal joint
These are low-motion joints, which is why they behave differently from high-motion joints like the fetlock.
In practice, this matters because:
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pain comes from movement within a joint that barely needs to move
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eliminating that movement often improves comfort
Most performance horses over time will develop some level of degenerative change here. The question is not whether arthritis exists, but whether it is limiting function.
What Does It Look Like Clinically
Common signs include:
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stiffness at the start of exercise
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shortened stride behind
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reluctance to engage the hind end
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difficulty with collection or lateral work
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temporary improvement after joint injections
One of the biggest clinical clues is this pattern:
improves after treatment, then gradually declines again
That tells you the joint is no longer responding sustainably.
Why Standard Treatments Eventually Fail
Early-stage management includes:
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corticosteroid joint injections
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hyaluronic acid
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NSAIDs
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joint supplements
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shoeing adjustments
These work by reducing inflammation.
But as arthritis progresses:
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cartilage damage becomes irreversible
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inflammation returns faster
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injection intervals shorten
At this point, continuing the same approach often just delays the inevitable.
The Key Concept: Why Fusion Works
This is where many owners get confused.
Arthritis hurts because the joint moves.
If the joint no longer moves, it no longer hurts.
In the lower hock joints:
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movement is minimal anyway
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fusion does not significantly affect performance
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pain can be dramatically reduced or eliminated
This is why arthrodesis can be a very effective solution.
What Is Arthrodesis
Arthrodesis means permanently fusing a joint.
This can be done:
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surgically
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chemically
The goal is the same:
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remove cartilage
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allow bone to fuse
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eliminate painful movement
Ethyl Alcohol Arthrodesis: A Practical Option
Ethyl alcohol injection is a non-surgical method used to achieve fusion.
How it works
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alcohol is injected into the lower hock joints
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cartilage cells are destroyed
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the body responds by fusing the joint
Why this approach is used
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avoids general anesthesia
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less invasive
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more cost-effective
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can be performed standing under sedation
In experienced hands, this has become a highly practical option for the right cases.
How Effective Is It
Clinical outcomes have been strong when used appropriately.
In practice:
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many horses return to work within a few months
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pain is significantly reduced or eliminated
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performance often improves because discomfort is removed
The key is case selection and correct technique.
Which Horses Are Good Candidates
Best candidates include:
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horses with confirmed lower hock arthritis on imaging
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horses no longer responding to injections
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performance horses limited by hind limb stiffness
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cases where pain is clearly originating from low-motion joints
Not every hock problem is suitable.
This is where proper diagnosis matters.
How Serious Is This Decision
Low Risk Situation
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mild arthritis
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good response to injections
Action: continue conservative management
Moderate Situation
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injections still work but wear off quickly
Action: begin discussing long-term options, including fusion
Advanced Situation
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injections no longer effective
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ongoing performance limitation
Action: strong candidate for arthrodesis
Complex or Unclear Cases
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multiple joints involved
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unclear source of pain
Action: further diagnostics before proceeding
What To Expect After Treatment
Typical progression:
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First 1 to 2 weeks: rest and initial recovery
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6 to 8 weeks: gradual return to light work
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3 to 6 months: expected return to full work
There can be a short period where discomfort increases during the fusion process.
This is normal but should be monitored.
When To Seek Veterinary Advice
You should involve a vet if:
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hind limb stiffness is persistent
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performance continues to decline
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injections are no longer lasting
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lameness keeps returning
The earlier you reassess the plan, the better the outcome tends to be.
Common Mistakes
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continuing injections long after they stop being effective
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assuming arthritis always needs to be “managed” rather than resolved
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delaying imaging and proper diagnosis
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treating symptoms without addressing the underlying joint mechanics
In practice, the biggest mistake is staying in a cycle that is no longer working.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a horse perform normally with a fused hock?
Yes. These joints have very little natural movement, so fusion often improves performance by removing pain.
Is ethyl alcohol arthrodesis safe?
Yes when performed correctly. Accuracy is critical to avoid affecting adjacent joints.
Will my horse feel worse before getting better?
Possibly. Some horses have temporary discomfort as the fusion process occurs.
How long before my horse is sound again?
Many horses return to work within 3 to 6 months, depending on severity.
Is surgery better than alcohol injection?
Not necessarily. Both aim for the same outcome. The best choice depends on the individual case.
Final Thoughts
Lower hock arthritis is not always a condition that needs to be endlessly managed.
In the right cases, removing joint movement altogether is what solves the problem.
The key is recognising when:
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treatments are no longer lasting
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the joint has become the limiting factor
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a different approach is needed
When that shift is made at the right time, outcomes can be excellent.
If you are unsure whether your horse is still in the “manageable” stage or approaching the point where fusion should be considered, ASK A VET™ can help guide that decision with clear, case-specific advice.