Draw It Out® Horse Health Library

Horse Care Terms Index

Plain-English definitions for the words horse owners hear from vets, farriers, trainers, bodyworkers, and old-timers leaning on the stall door.

Quick answer: This is a translation layer for real riders. Use it to understand the term, spot red flags, and know which professional lane or routine-care path makes sense next. It is not a diagnosis.

Do not let a glossary delay a call

Call your veterinarian or farrier for sudden severe lameness, non-weight-bearing, hoof heat with a bounding digital pulse, fever, colic signs, punctures, wounds near joints or eyes, rapid one-leg swelling, abnormal breathing, collapse, or anything getting worse instead of better.

Find a term fast

Search by word, body area, professional lane, or common barn phrase. Filter by category when you already know whether it sounds like a vet, farrier, movement, routine, or red-flag issue.

A

Abscess
A pocket of infection, often inside the hoof, that can make a horse look suddenly very lame. Call your farrier or veterinarian when lameness is sudden, severe, or paired with heat, swelling, drainage, or a strong digital pulse.
Farrier wordsRed flags
Acute
A problem that is new, sudden, or fast-changing. Acute heat, swelling, pain, or lameness should be treated as more urgent than a long-standing cosmetic change.
Vet words
Arthritis
Joint inflammation or degenerative joint change that can show up as stiffness, shortened stride, or harder warmups. Diagnosis and treatment plans belong with your veterinarian.
Vet wordsMovement

B

Bandage bow
Tendon or soft-tissue irritation caused by uneven, tight, or poorly placed wraps. Use smooth padding and even tension. Heat, swelling, or pain after wrapping is a red flag.
Care routinesRed flags
Bars
The folded-in structures of hoof wall beside the frog. Farriers watch bars because trimming balance can affect comfort and hoof function.
Farrier words
Bilateral swelling
Swelling on both sides or in both matching limbs. Even, cool fill can be routine stocking up. Heat, pain, or lameness changes the concern level.
Vet words
Bounding digital pulse
A stronger-than-normal pulse felt near the pastern or fetlock. With hoof heat, pain, or lameness, this is a call-the-vet/farrier signal.
Red flagsFarrier wordsVet words
Bowed tendon
A tendon injury that can create a bowed contour along the back of the cannon area. This needs veterinary diagnosis, controlled rehab, and patience.
Vet wordsMovementRed flags
Breakover
The moment the hoof rolls over the toe and leaves the ground. Farriers talk about breakover when balancing feet, trimming toes, or adjusting shoeing.
Farrier wordsMovement

C

Cannon bone
The main long bone between the knee or hock and the fetlock. It is a useful landmark when comparing swelling, splints, tendons, and symmetry.
Movement
Cellulitis
A serious soft-tissue infection that can cause rapid, painful limb swelling, heat, and sometimes fever. This is urgent veterinary territory, especially if one leg blows up quickly.
Vet wordsRed flags
Coffin bone
The bone inside the hoof capsule, also called P3. It comes up in laminitis, founder, hoof balance, radiographs, and serious hoof-care conversations.
Farrier wordsVet words
Cold-backed
A horse that reacts to saddling, mounting, or early work through the back. Check saddle fit, skin, workload, warmup, and professional care if it persists.
Movement
Colic
A broad term for abdominal pain in horses. Pawing, rolling, looking at the side, not eating, sweating, or repeated lying down means call your veterinarian.
Vet wordsRed flags
Contracted heels
Narrowed heels that can affect hoof mechanics and comfort. This is a farrier and sometimes veterinary conversation, not a quick product fix.
Farrier words
Coronary band
The tissue line at the top of the hoof where hoof wall grows from. Injuries here matter because they can affect future hoof growth.
Farrier words
Crossfiring
A gait issue where the front and hind ends appear out of sync, often discussed at the lope or canter. Look at balance, soreness, tack fit, training, and footing before guessing.
MovementFarrier words

D

Deep digital flexor tendon
A major tendon that runs down the back of the limb and attaches inside the hoof. It matters in navicular discussions, hoof balance, and certain tendon injuries.
Vet wordsFarrier words
Digital pulse
The pulse felt near the pastern or fetlock, often used as a hoof-health clue. A strong pulse with hoof heat, pain, or lameness is a red flag.
Vet wordsFarrier wordsRed flags
Dry-to-touch
The point after applying a topical when the coat no longer feels slick or wet. Useful before boots, pads, or wraps when the product label and routine allow it.
Care routinesProduct formats

E–F

Edema
Fluid swelling in tissue. Even, cool fill can be routine. One-leg swelling, heat, pain, fever, or lameness is more concerning.
Vet words
Farrier
The hoof-care professional who trims, balances, and may shoe the horse. A good farrier is part mechanic, part craftsman, part detective.
Farrier words
Fetlock
The joint above the pastern and below the cannon bone. It is a common landmark for windpuffs, wrapping, swelling checks, and digital pulse location.
Movement
Flexion test
A veterinary exam tool where a limb is flexed before the horse trots off. It helps localize possible discomfort but is not a stand-alone diagnosis.
Vet wordsMovement
Forging
When a hind hoof strikes a front shoe or hoof during movement. Often connected to balance, timing, fatigue, shoeing, or movement mechanics.
MovementFarrier words
Founder
A common barn term often used when laminitis has progressed to structural change inside the hoof. Treat suspected founder or laminitis as urgent veterinary/farrier territory.
Vet wordsFarrier wordsRed flags
Frog
The V-shaped structure on the bottom of the hoof. It supports traction, circulation, and hoof function, and farriers watch its condition closely.
Farrier words

G–H

Girthy
A horse that reacts when the cinch or girth is tightened. Check skin, ulcers, soreness, saddle fit, handling, and veterinary guidance when signs persist.
MovementVet words
Heel bulb
The soft rounded back part of the hoof above the heel. Cracks, cuts, or tenderness here can affect comfort and shoeing decisions.
Farrier words
Heat
Warmth can be normal after work, but heat with pain, swelling, lameness, or a strong digital pulse is different. Compare left to right and call a professional when heat is paired with other signs.
Red flags
Hoof capsule
The hard outer structure of the hoof surrounding internal bones and soft tissue. Farriers manage the capsule through trimming, balance, and shoeing choices.
Farrier words
Hoof testers
A tool used to apply pressure to areas of the hoof to help locate pain. Common in farrier and veterinary lameness checks.
Farrier wordsVet words

I–L

Ice boots
Boots designed to cool the lower limb after work or injury. Follow directions. Excessive cold or poor fit can create new problems.
Care routines
Inflammation
A body response that can include heat, swelling, pain, redness, or loss of function. The cause matters, so do not treat inflammation like one single problem.
Vet words
Interference
When one limb hits another during movement. May involve conformation, fatigue, balance, shoeing, or training.
MovementFarrier words
Joint effusion
Extra fluid in or around a joint, sometimes called joint filling. New, hot, painful, or asymmetric joint swelling deserves veterinary attention.
Vet words
Laminae
Sensitive tissue structures that help suspend the coffin bone inside the hoof capsule. This term matters in laminitis and founder discussions.
Farrier wordsVet words
Laminitis
Inflammation and damage involving the laminae inside the hoof. Hoof heat, strong digital pulse, rocked-back stance, or sudden hoof pain is urgent.
Vet wordsFarrier wordsRed flags
Lateral
Toward the outside of the horse or limb. Farriers and vets use medial/lateral language to describe balance, swelling, and movement.
Farrier wordsMovement
Lameness grade
A scoring system vets use to describe how obvious lameness is. The number helps track severity, but it does not replace finding the cause.
Vet wordsMovement
Liniment
A topical external-use product used in routine leg, body, and post-work care. Use on intact skin according to label directions and do not use it as a diagnosis substitute.
Care routinesProduct formats
Lymphangitis
Painful swelling related to the lymphatic system, often dramatic and often in one limb. This needs veterinary attention.
Vet wordsRed flags

M–N

Medial
Toward the inside of the horse or limb. Used with lateral to describe hoof balance, swelling, and movement.
Farrier wordsMovement
Navicular
A term used around the navicular bone and related heel pain/navicular syndrome discussions. Requires veterinary diagnosis and farrier collaboration.
Vet wordsFarrier words
Non-weight-bearing
When a horse will not put weight on a limb. Call your veterinarian immediately.
Red flags

O–Q

Overreach
When a hind foot reaches forward and strikes a front heel or shoe area. May involve gait timing, fatigue, shoeing, footing, or protection choices.
Movement
Pastern
The area between the fetlock and hoof. It is a common landmark for digital pulse checks and lower-leg descriptions.
MovementFarrier words
Poultice
A clay, mud, or paste-style topical used in certain leg-care routines on clean, intact skin. Follow label directions and do not poultice over wounds unless directed by a professional.
Care routinesProduct formats
Puncture wound
A narrow wound caused by something sharp, especially near the hoof, joint, tendon sheath, or eye. Do not treat casually. Call your veterinarian.
Red flagsVet words
Quarter crack
A vertical hoof wall crack in the quarter area of the hoof. Requires farrier evaluation and sometimes veterinary support.
Farrier words
Quittor
A chronic infection or draining tract around the collateral cartilage/hoof area. This is professional-care territory.
Vet wordsFarrier words

R–S

Ringbone
Arthritic bone change around the pastern or coffin joint region. Management requires veterinary diagnosis and farrier planning.
Vet wordsFarrier words
Scratches
Lower-limb dermatitis often tied to moisture, irritation, mud, or skin compromise. Painful, spreading, swollen, or infected-looking cases need veterinary care.
Vet wordsCare routines
Sheath swelling
Fluid or swelling around the sheath area in geldings or stallions. It can be routine or serious depending on pain, urination, fever, swelling pattern, and behavior.
Vet words
Short-strided
A shortened step that can come from soreness, fatigue, footing, tack fit, hoof balance, or training. Look for patterns instead of guessing from one ride.
Movement
Sole
The bottom surface of the hoof around the frog and inside the hoof wall. Thin soles, bruising, or tenderness are common farrier/vet discussion points.
Farrier words
Sole depth
The amount of protective hoof material between the ground and internal hoof structures. Often evaluated with radiographs and farrier input.
Farrier wordsVet words
Splint
A bony enlargement along the cannon region, often near the splint bones. New heat, pain, or lameness needs evaluation.
Vet wordsFarrier words
Standing wrap
A rest wrap using padding and even tension, usually for stall or hauling routines. Bad wraps can hurt horses. Recheck for pressure, slipping, heat, and swelling changes.
Care routines
Stocking up
Even, usually cool lower-leg fill that appears after stall time or travel and often improves with movement. Do not confuse it with hot, painful, one-leg swelling.
Care routinesMovement
Stifle
A major hind-limb joint often discussed when horses feel weak behind, sticky in transitions, or reluctant to step under. Persistent signs deserve professional evaluation.
MovementVet words
Suspensory
A key support structure in the lower limb. Suspensory injuries need veterinary diagnosis and controlled rehab.
Vet wordsMovement

T–W

Tendon sheath
A fluid-filled sleeve around a tendon. Swelling here can look like windpuffs, but changes with pain, heat, or lameness matter.
Vet words
Thrush
A common hoof condition involving the frog area, often associated with moisture and poor hoof hygiene. Deep cracks, odor, tenderness, or persistent cases need farrier/vet guidance.
Farrier words
Toe drag
Scuffing or dragging the toe during stride. Watch whether it is one-sided, fatigue-related, persistent, or paired with weakness.
MovementFarrier words
Underrun heels
Heels that run forward instead of supporting the hoof capsule properly. A farrier balance issue that can affect comfort and mechanics.
Farrier words
Unilateral swelling
Swelling on one side or in one limb. One hot, painful, swollen leg is more concerning than even cool fill in both legs.
Red flagsVet words
Veterinary red flag
A sign that should not be handled as a simple product question. Examples include severe lameness, fever, rapid swelling, wounds, punctures, abnormal breathing, colic signs, or worsening symptoms.
Red flags
White line
The junction area between the hoof wall and sole. Farriers watch it for separation, stretching, cracks, and infection risk.
Farrier words
White line disease
A hoof-wall separation/infection problem involving the white line area. Needs farrier management and sometimes veterinary input.
Farrier wordsVet words
Windpuffs
Soft swelling near the fetlocks, often cool and sometimes cosmetic. Heat, pain, lameness, or sudden change deserves attention.
MovementVet words
Withers
The top of the shoulder/back area where saddle fit and sensitivity are often assessed. Soreness here can point toward saddle fit, skin, or back comfort issues.
Movement
Wrap method
A repeatable safe-wrapping process: clean materials, smooth padding, even tension, proper overlap, and rechecks. If you are not confident wrapping, get hands-on instruction.
Care routines

How Draw It Out® should use this page

This index should be linked from product guides, symptom blogs, emails, and customer-service replies any time a rider is asking, “What does that mean?” It earns trust before it asks for a sale.

Educational content only. Draw It Out® product education supports owner decision-making and routine care. It does not diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent disease. Follow product labels and consult your veterinarian, farrier, saddle fitter, trainer, or other qualified professional for medical, hoof, tack, training, or emergency concerns.

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