6 Feb 2026 5 min read

5 things to discuss with your vet

In 5 things to discuss with your vet, we help prepare you for a conversation about your horse's lameness. Noting your observations and listing any concerns - in advance of your visit - will be invaluable in helping your vet reach a diagnosis.
Carina Northern MRCVS
Carina Northern MRCVS

If you think something’s off with your horse, be reassured that the feeling is real. It’s also more common than you think. You’re not overreacting, you’re being a responsible owner but that can sometimes be frustrating, especially if you still don’t have the answers.

If you’ve already done some reading, watched a few videos, compared notes with friends, and still feel your horse isn’t quite moving right, the next best step is a good, honest conversation with your vet. You don’t need to become a lameness expert but providing your vet with clear, calm information will help you move forward with confidence.

Here are five things worth discussing.

Recognising and diagnosing lameness is crucial to ensuring your horse’s long-term health and soundness

1. Share your horse’s lameness story briefly and clearly

You’ve noticed something and – even if you can’t describe it perfectly – start with the basics:

  • When you first felt or saw the issue
  • Whether it’s new, inconsistent, or gradually worsening
  • Anything that has changed recently: surface, workload, farriery, saddle fit, rider, turnout, weather

You’re not expected to have the answers, but offering the broader context is gold dust for your vet. A simple one‑minute summary is often more valuable than an anxious ten‑minute ramble (we’ve all been there).

Helpful phrases to use

  • “I’m not sure exactly what I’m seeing, but this is when I first noticed it…”
  • “Here’s what seems to make it better or worse…”

This avoids the feeling of “I don’t want to sound silly,” while giving your vet a strong starting point.

“Remember, there’s no such thing as a stupid question. If you’re thinking it, then it’s important to discuss your concerns.”
Carina Northern MRCVS
Carina Northern MRCVS

2. Ask your vet what patterns to look for

Most owners already observe their horses closely, but lameness benefits from structure. Ask your vet what specific things they’d like you to track over the next few days:

  • Straight line vs circle
  • Firm vs soft ground
  • Before vs after warm‑up
  • Left rein vs right rein
  • Tired vs fresh

Collecting repeatable bits of information will help your vet narrow things down. This also stops the mental spiral of “It’s different every day, so what if I’m imagining it?” You’re not but keeping a record of what you see is invaluable.

3. Offer videos & ask which view is most useful

Most vets will appreciate a few good video clips rather than one long montage. You could ask:

“What angles or surfaces would you like me to film?”

Your vet may request:

  • Straight line trot
  • A circle on each rein
  • A side on view
  • A short clip before exercise and one after

This removes the pressure of guessing and reassures you that what you’re providing will actually help.

4. Discuss possible next steps without fear of judgement

This is where many owners worry they’ll sound dramatic, or stupid, or both. But asking about the process isn’t being pushy, it’s being prepared.

Try questions like:

  • “What are we trying to rule in or rule out first?”
  • “If today’s assessment doesn’t give us the full picture, what might the next step be?”
  • “Is this something that might benefit from imaging, or are we not at that stage yet?”

Your vet will walk you through the step‑by‑step reasoning. A lameness work-up is a decision tree, not a guess. Understanding that will help reduce worry and stop you from filling in the gaps with worst‑case scenarios.

5. Ask if imaging could help

Sometimes the clinical exam gives your vet everything they need. Sometimes ultrasound or radiographs (X‑ray) may answer the key question. Other times, especially when deeper soft‑tissue structures are involved or the picture is unclear, MRI becomes the logical next step.

This doesn’t mean you’re jumping ahead. It simply shows you’re open to understanding the full picture and why (or why not) it might help. Feel comfortable asking:

  • “If imaging becomes relevant, what question are we trying to answer?”
  • “What would imaging change about treatment or rehab?”
  • “Would something like MRI give us information that other tools can’t?”

Remember, there’s no such thing as a stupid question. If you’re thinking it then it’s important to discuss your concerns. You’re not asking for imaging, you’re asking for clarity. There’s a difference.

A quick confidence checklist

If you only do three things before your vet visit, do these:

  • Prepare a short lameness summary: when it started, what you see, what’s changed
  • Bring 2–3 short videos filmed on safe, consistent surfaces
  • Have a few focused questions ready so the conversation flows

Your vet will thank you for being prepared with observations that help tell your horse’s lameness story.

And, if your horse could thank you for that, they would!

Footnote…

Lameness diagnosis is important for both you and your horse. As an owner, recognising and diagnosing lameness is crucial to ensuring your horse’s long-term soundness. Early diagnosis provides clarity, reduces stress, and helps you and your vet to make informed decisions to support your horse’s health.

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Spot The Signs

Could you spot these signs of lameness in your horse?

This short quiz is educational, not diagnostic. It helps you check what you already know and learn what vets often ask owners to look for.

  • Spot subtle signs that can look like behaviour, stiffness or something “just not quite right”
  • Learn the language to describe what you are seeing in plain English
  • Understand what information helps your vet decide what to do next
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