Peak Performance Equine Vets

Peak Performance Equine Vets Practicing advanced diagnostics and equine sports medicine, emphasizing biomechanics and physical therapy.
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05/28/2026

Gastrobim has arrived! This is an FDA approved generic for Gastrogard. We are currently able to offer a special price of $38/tube to our current clients! 📲

Congratulation Rickie!!! We are SO proud of you!!!!  You’re a class act and a joy to watch over the last few years.
05/25/2026

Congratulation Rickie!!! We are SO proud of you!!!! You’re a class act and a joy to watch over the last few years.

Ultrasound imaging of a soft tissue swelling that occurred about 2 weeks ago revealed there is no significant fluid pock...
05/21/2026

Ultrasound imaging of a soft tissue swelling that occurred about 2 weeks ago revealed there is no significant fluid pocket that would benefit from surgical drainage. Years ago, I would have been tempted to lance it with a scalpel based on clinical presentation. Now I prefer to image lesions first. Oftentimes, less is more with horses.

Controversial statement:The most important part of sports medicine isn’t the therapy — it’s the diagnosis. As equine med...
05/18/2026

Controversial statement:

The most important part of sports medicine isn’t the therapy — it’s the diagnosis.

As equine medicine grows and evolves, we have access to more treatment options than ever before in history:

• Rehabilitation and conditioning programs
• Biologics and regenerative therapies
• Therapeutic shoeing
• Shockwave
• Modalities and devices and supplements, ad nauseam

But none of those matter if the diagnosis is incomplete or inaccurate.

For example:

A horse with a significant suspensory injury may initially seem like a straightforward candidate for a therapeutic suspensory shoe.

But if that same horse also has a mild concurrent DDFT lesion, that exact shoeing approach may be contraindicated and could place additional strain on the tendon.

That’s why equine sports medicine never follows a “recipe book.” There is no cookie-cutter protocol.

Good rehabilitation depends on understanding:

• The primary lesion
• Secondary compensatory injuries
• Biomechanics of the whole horse not just the lesion
• Discipline-specific demands
• Stage of healing
• The conformation and disposition of the horse in front of you

One of my favorite quotes is from Dr. A. Kent Allen:

“Absent a correct diagnosis, medicine is poison, surgery is trauma, and alternative therapy is witchcraft.”

That idea becomes more relevant every year as the market for injectables, devices, therapeutics, supplements, and performance enhancement continues to expand.

I argue that the goal should never be to simply apply treatments.

The goal is to understand when, why, and for which horse they are appropriate.

Without an expert foundation in biomechanics, pathophysiology, and accurate diagnosis, even advanced therapies can quickly become very expensive guesswork.

ANY treatment is only as good as the diagnosis guiding it.

Thank you ISELP for another fantastic weekend of “gettin’ smarter”, complete with an opening day ice cream truck! To Spy...
05/12/2026

Thank you ISELP for another fantastic weekend of “gettin’ smarter”, complete with an opening day ice cream truck!

To Spy Coast Farm, thank you for providing the facility. It is perfect for our modules.

No one has ever won from post  #17.
04/30/2026

No one has ever won from post #17.

It works pretty well on calves also.
04/30/2026

It works pretty well on calves also.

Have you heard of the Madigan Squeeze?

The Madigan foal squeeze is a veterinarian-performed technique that uses a soft rope arranged in a specific way to apply steady, snug pressure around a newborn foal’s chest/ribcage. Many foals respond to this firm pressure by lying down (“flopping”) and entering a quiet, sleep-like state (slow-wave sleep).

It’s used as an aid for foals with neonatal maladjustment syndrome (“dummy foal”), and it’s also used in healthy foals (typically < 3 days old) to make procedures like plasma administration, ultrasound exams, or other minor procedures easier and less stressful. The squeeze is usually maintained for about 20 minutes (generally limited to 20–30 minutes) while the foal’s breathing, heart rate, and mucous membrane color are monitored.

After the squeeze, the rope is released, and the foal is allowed to stay down or get up on its own. For maladjusted foals, the team then observes alertness and nursing behavior; in some cases, the squeeze may be repeated every 2–4 hours if needed.

Important safety note: this is not anesthesia, and a foal can arouse and kick, so it should only be done by skilled clinicians. It’s not recommended with suspected rib fractures, respiratory distress, septic shock, severe prematurity with floppy chests, severe neuromuscular disease affecting breathing, or congenital anomalies.

If you have questions or concerns about your own foal, contact your veterinarian.

📸 Photo courtesy of Pine Ridge Equine Hospital

Emotional blackmail is alive and well in veterinary medicine.  Let me say it LOUDER FOR THE PEOPLE IN THE BACK:  America...
04/16/2026

Emotional blackmail is alive and well in veterinary medicine.
Let me say it LOUDER FOR THE PEOPLE IN THE BACK:
America DOES NOT HAVE A SHORTAGE of equine or large animal veterinarians. WE HAVE A SHORTAGE OF COMMUNITIES THAT VALUE AND SUPPORT ONE!!!!!!

Learn how to handle and get out of emotional blackmail.

I’ve been quietly working on something outside of clinical practice.Introducing a curated carrot pairing program designe...
04/01/2026

I’ve been quietly working on something outside of clinical practice.

Introducing a curated carrot pairing program designed to complement your horse’s workload, temperament, and palate.

Locally sourced. Hand-selected. Thoughtfully matched.

Notes of earth, anxiety reduction, and subtle crunch.

Booking opens this week.

🐎🐎  I need some help making a breeding decision 👇I’ve got a proven cowhorse mare I’m planning to breed this season, and ...
03/26/2026

🐎🐎 I need some help making a breeding decision 👇

I’ve got a proven cowhorse mare I’m planning to breed this season, and I’ve narrowed it down to 3 stallions.

Pictures attached are of mare-in-training.

Mare details:
• Own daughter of WR This Cats Smart
• Out of Shes Really Smooth (Wheeling Peppy x Smooth Hickory)
• Money earner on the SHOT circuit (Stock Horse of Texas)
• Trained reined-cowhorse

What she is:
• Very cowy, quick-footed, and gritty
• Strong stop and a lot of try, very trainable

Where I’d improve her:
• Could use a touch more size and substance
• Wouldn’t mind adding a little more consistency/relaxation

My goals for this cross:
• Keep the cow and athleticism
• Add durability + longevity
• Produce a versatile western performance prospect (cowhorse/cutter/rope horse)

Here’s where I’m stuck 👇

A — Third Cutting
• Proven cowhorse influence
• Likely adds strength, bone, and consistency

B — Dont Stopp Believin
• Known for mind and trainability
• Could complement her intensity

C — Cats Emoji
• Modern cowhorse genetics
• Adds quickness, style, and athleticism

👉 If this were your mare… which direction are you going?

Comment A, B, or C — but more importantly, tell me WHY.
(Performance, mind, durability, what you’re seeing in their offspring, etc.)

Would you prioritize more mind, more bone, or doubling down on athleticism?

I’ll share what I decide and break down the cross from a sports medicine + repro perspective.

📣Trainers—What are you seeing on the ground from these crosses?

Address

Sheridan, WY
82801

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 4pm
Tuesday 9am - 4pm
Wednesday 9am - 4pm
Thursday 9am - 4pm
Friday 9am - 3pm

Telephone

(719) 738-1427

Website

http://www.iselp.org/, http://www.iselp.org/, http://www.iser-society.org/

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