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    back at the knee: a leg that looks like it has a backward arc with its
      center at the knee when viewed from the side.

      bad doer: a horse with a poor appetite, a condition that may be due to
      nervous-ness or other causes.

      bandage: bandages used on horses’ legs are 3 to 6 inches wide and are made
      of a variety of materials. In a competition, they are used for support or
      protection against injury. A horse may also wear "standing bandages,"
      thick cotton wraps used during shipping and while in the stall to prevent
      swelling and/or injury.

      bar shoe: a horseshoe closed at the back to help support the frog and heel
      of the hoof. It is often worn by horses with quarter cracks or bruised
      feet.

      barren: used to describe a filly or mare that was bred and did not
      conceive during the last breeding season.

     basilar (fracture): see sesamoids.

      bay: a horse color that varies from a yellow-tan to a bright auburn. The
      mane, tail and lower portion of the legs are always black, except where
      white markings are present.

     benign: referring to a cancerous growth: Not invasive or destructive, and
      not tending to spread to other areas of the body.

      bit: mouthpiece made of variety of materials, including stainless steel,
      rubber or aluminum, jointed or unjointed, and attached to the bridle. It
      is one of the means by which a rider exerts guidance and control. Three
      common types of bits are the snaffle, Pelham and curb.

      black walnut shavings toxicosis: an as-yet unexplained poisoning from skin
      contact with wood shavings made from the black walnut tree, most often the
      consequence of unknowingly using them to bed a stall. (Anecdotal evidence
      suggests that other walnut varieties may also be toxic.) Vasculitis and
      laminitis are virtually guaranteed and usually severe. Treament involves
      removing the walnut shavings and treating the resultant vasculitis and/or
      laminitis.

      black: a horse color which is black, including the muzzle, flanks, mane,
      tail and legs unless white markings are present.

      blaze: a generic term describing a large, white vertical marking of medium
      width running the length of the horse's face.

     bleeder (see exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage): a horse that bleeds
      from the lungs when small capillaries rupture into the air sacs. The
      medical term is Exercise-Induced Pulmonary Hemorrhage (EIPH). Blood may be
      seen coming out of the horse’s nostrils. This is termed epistaxis.
      Diagnosis of EIPH is typically made during a post-exercise veterinary
      examination using a fiberoptic endoscope. The procedure is referred to as
      an endoscopic examination. Less than one bleeder in 20 shows signs of
      epistaxis (blood at the nostrils). Hot, humid weather and cold weather are
      known to exacerbate the problem. The most common preventive treatment
      currently available is the use of the diuretic furosemide (Salix™).

      blister beetle poisoning: poisoning due to ingestion of a beetle,
      typically 1/2 inch long, solid black or black with yellow stripes. It
      inhabits some alfalfa fields and other forages, and contains a powerful
      stomach irritant called canthardin. Most poisonings occur when the beetle
      is killed and baled into your horse's hay, then ingested. The toxin can
      cause severe colic due to burning of the stomach lining. Ingestion of only
      a few beetles can be fatal to a full-grown horse and treament is
      symptomatic and supportive. Prognosis is guarded: As many as half of all 
     patients die despite vigorous therapy.

     blister: counter-irritant causing acute inflammation. Used to increase
      blood supply and blood flow, and to promote healing in the leg.
      bloodstock agent: a person who advises and/or represents a buyer or seller
      of horses at a public auction or a private sale. A bloodstock agent
      usually works on commission, often five percent of the purchase price, and
      can also prepare a horse for sale.

     blue roan: in Quarter horses, a more or less uniform mixture of white with
      black hairs over a large portion of the body, but usually darker on head
      and lower legs; can have a few red hairs in the mixture.

      bog spavin: a soft swelling caused by excess synovial fluid of the largest
      joint of the hock called the "tibiotarsal joint."

     bone grafts: utilizing bone taken from one part of the body to promote
      formation of bone in another region.

      bone spavin: bone spavin is arthritis of the lower portion of the hock.
      Most commonly, bone spavin appears as a hard swellling on the inner
      (joint) surface, where the hock meets the cannon bone. It also can occur
      in the lower aspect of your horse's hock joint without visible
      enlargement. Lameness is common but can be difficult to detect because
      both hind limbs are often affected. Pain is often associated with flexing
      and advancing the affected the affected limb(s), causing your horse to
      carry the leg(s) abnormally and/or drag his toe, as revelaed by unusual
      wear patterns there.

      boots: any of a number of devices strapped or hung from a horse's legs and
      coronets designed to offer protection from injury.

     bottom line: a horse's breeding on the female side. The lower half of an
      extended pedigree diagram.

     bottom: 1) stamina in a horse. 2) subsurface of a racing strip.

      botulism, forage poisoning: disease caused by the nerve-poisoning toxin of
      the bacteria Clostridium botulinum which live in certain soils, wounds and
      in decaying organic matter. The first signs in adult horses can include
      loss of tongue, tail and eyelid tone, resulting in subtle changes in the
      face and tail carriage that often go unnoticed. As the disease progresses,
      swallowing can become difficult, resulting in quidding, drooling, tongue
      lolling and/or bad breath, followed by weakness, gait instability,
      collapse and death by respiratory paralysis. Intensive-care treament,
      including administration of botulism antitoxin, is successful in
      approximately 70 percent of cases.

      bowed tendon: tendonitis. The most common injury to the tendons is a
      strain or "bowed tendon" so named because of the appearance of a bow shape
      due to swelling. The most common site of injury is in the superficial
      digital flexor tendon between the knee and the ankle behind the cannon
      bone. Despite aggressive treatment with anti-flammatory drugs, physical
      therapy and rest, horses frequently reinjure the tendon when they go back
      into competition. Two surgeries are felt to aid horses to come back to
      competition: tendon splitting at the lesion site to release accumulated
      fluid and blood, and superior check ligament desmotomy (dissection of the
      ligament). The latter surgery, which involves severing one of the upper
      attachments of the tendon, is designed to reduce forces on the tendon when
      the horse returns to training and competing. Diagnostic ultrasound is the
      most common method of diagnosing this condition and monitoring the healing
      process.

      brace or bracer: rubdown liniment used on a horse after a workout.

      breakdown: when a horse expereices a potentially career-ending injury,
      usually to the leg involving a fracture. Some can be repaired with surgery
      and physical therapy.

     breastplate: piece of tack that fits across the horse’s chest and is
      attached to the saddle. Its purpose is to prevent the saddle from slipping
      backward.

     breather: easing off a horse for a short distance in a speed effort to
      conserve or renew its strength.

      bred: 1) a horse is considered to have been bred in the state or country
      of its birth: Secretariat was a Virginia-bred. 2) the past tense of
      "breed."

     breed: 1) a sort or type of horse. 2) to reproduce.

     breeder: owner of the dam at time of foaling unless the dam was under a
      lease or foal-sharing arrangement at the time of foaling. In that case,
      the person(s) specified by the terms of the agreement is (are) the
      breeder(s) of the foal.

      breeding fund: a state fund set up to provide bonuses for state-breds.
      breeze (breezing): working a horse at a moderate speed, less effort than
      handily.

      bridle: a piece of equipment, usually made of leather or nylon, which fits
      on a horse’s head and to which other equipment, such as a bit and the
      reins, are attached.

     broken wind: see chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

     brush: injury that occurs when one hoof strikes the inside of the opposite
      limb.
     bucked shins: inflammation of the covering of the bone (periosteum) of the
      front surface of the cannon bone. Usually seen in two-to three-year-old
      Thoroughbreds. See periostitis

     bulbs of the heel: the two areas on either side of the back of the foot, 
     similar to the heel of the hand.

     bursa: a sac containing synovial fluid (a natural lubricant). Acts as a 
     pad or cushion to facilitate motion between soft tissue and bone. Most 
     commonly found where tendons pass over bones.
      bursitis: inflammation in a bursa that results in swelling due to
      accumulation of synovial fluid. Capped elbow is inflammation of the bursa
      over the point of elbow (olecranon process of the ulna). Capped hock is
      inflammation of the bursa over the point of the hock (tuber calcis).
      bute: short for phenylbutazone, a non-steroidal anti-flammatory
      medication.
 
      buy-back: a horse out through a public auction that did not reach a
      minimum (reserve) price set by the consignor and so was retained. The
      consignor must pay a fee to the auction company based on a percentage of
      the reserve, to cover the auction company's marketing, advertising and
      other costs.
     
      BVMS: Bachelor of Veterinary Medicine and Surgery. Equivalent to DVM.
      Awarded in United Kingdom.
     
      BVSc: Bachelor of Veterinary Science. Equivalent to DVM. Common veterinary
      degree description outside the United States.