Horse & Hound

Back on track

When chaser Edwulf ’s life was left hanging in the balance after his dramatic racing collapse, few expected to witness such a remarkable recovery. Andrea Oakes reports

- H&H

THE closing stages of a race are often filled with drama and excitement, yet the tension was heightened at the Cheltenham Festival last year when Edwulf ’s prospects took a sudden turn for the worse at the end of the four-mile chase.

During the charge to the finish line, the gelding appeared to lose control of his legs and was pulled up by jockey Derek O’Connor. He collapsed on the track, shaking and convulsing. The outlook appeared bleak as screens were drawn around him — even more so when, nearly an hour later, vets were still working to get him to his feet.

Despite suffering a chaotic heartbeat and temporary blindness, Edwulf not only survived, but fought back to win again. His extraordin­ary story begins as he runs into trouble soon after clearing the final fence…

14 MARCH 2017

AS Edwulf staggers and hits the floor, on-course vets including David Chalkley and Henry Tremaine race to his side. The gelding’s rolling eyes indicate some sort of neurologic­al crisis.

“Most recumbenci­es in racing are due to the horse falling over a fence or being brought down, which was not the case with Edwulf,” explains the racecourse’s senior veterinary surgeon

Liam Kearns MRCVS, of Three Counties Equine Hospital. “It appeared that he had overheated as a result of exertion and was suffering from cerebral hypoxia — an acute oxygen deficit.

“He was immediatel­y given anti-inflammato­ry medication into his jugular vein and light sedation to ease the neurologic­al signs. Meanwhile, the cooling process was started. An overheated horse is usually up and walking and benefits from evaporatio­n as water is applied

and scraped off, but it’s more difficult when he is recumbent.”

Although Edwulf had been galloping and jumping well, neurologic­al tests are used to check for a skull or spinal fracture.

“If the horse fails to withdraw his leg when the skin on his fetlock is pinched, for example, this indicates that messages are not getting through from his brain to the limb,” explains Liam. “These tests are not so easily interprete­d, however, when exertion fatigue is involved.”

Edwulf ’s heart rate and gum colour are monitored and he receives intravenou­s fluid, but he remains down. The Gloucester­shire Fire and

Rescue Service roll him on to a sliding stretcher called a glide, so treatment can be continued away from the track.

Liam explains: “Recumbency in itself is not necessaril­y an issue, but the question is what is the cause — and has any permanent damage been done? Edwulf had shown an erratic heartbeat, known as dysrhythmi­a, but this returned to normal fairly quickly. It was a matter of monitoring his responses and giving him time to recover, while waiting for him to show signs that he was ready to get up.”

More than 45 minutes after his collapse, a wobbly Edwulf rises to his feet. The vets steady him and help him with limb placement, before guiding him into a waiting ambulance equipped with a low ramp and a support sling. The clerk of the course arranges a police escort to facilitate the 25-minute journey to Three Counties Equine Hospital.

“When we unloaded him and put him in a stable it was evident that he couldn’t see,” says Liam. “There was no visible damage to his eyes, but this blindness tied in with the hypoxia. We gave him more fluid therapy and medication, including an antiinflam­matory to help combat brain oedema [swelling].”

15 MARCH 2017

AFTER a night under observatio­n, a much-improved Edwulf is up and eating the next morning.

“His sight was back to normal and he was a hugely brighter horse,” says Liam. “There was no sign of trauma. His temperatur­e and heart, pulse and respirator­y rates were monitored and all were within normal parameters.”

18 MARCH 2017

EDWULF can now go out to graze.

“His recovery was remarkably quick,” says Liam, who was astonished to see the lofty gelding having a buck and a canter in the field. “He had routine haematolog­y [blood testing], which didn’t reveal anything extraordin­ary, and there were no signs of neurologic­al deficit.”

Veterinary nurse Annie Rogers is also surprised by his daily improvemen­ts.

“He bounced back really quickly,” she says. “He was a pleasure to have around and he made our job easy.”

24 MARCH 2017

NOW well enough to travel, Edwulf sets off from Gloucester­shire for the boat trip back to Ireland. He will enjoy a lengthy holiday at owner JP McManus’ Martinstow­n Stud, under the care of vets John Halley and Ger Kelly.

AUGUST 2017

AFTER a summer recuperati­ng at grass, Edwulf ’s connection­s feel that he is ready to begin some light exercise. He starts with daily sessions on the horsewalke­r to start building condition.

SEPTEMBER 2017

EDWULF heads to trainer

Joseph O’Brien’s yard in Piltown, Co. Kilkenny.

“He’d had a really good break and everyone was of the opinion that he could go back into some kind of training,” said Joseph.

“He was on such good form and looked so well. Medically, he was 100% — the vets said the chances of the same thing happening again were no greater than with any other horse.”

DECEMBER 2017

ONCE back in training, Edwulf continues to impress Joseph’s team with his progress.

“He was so fresh and was thriving, eating well and enjoying his schooling,” Joseph recalls.

“We spoke to JP and decided to run him at Leopardsto­wn at Christmas. He showed great enthusiasm and jumped well, but he was pulled up before the finish. He was just a bit short of work.”

4 FEBRUARY 2018

IN a fairytale finish, Edwulf wins the Irish Gold Cup at Leopardsto­wn — battling from third position over the final fence under jockey Derek O’Connor.

It’s a miraculous outcome for the horse who had cheated death a year previously.

“It’s great when it all works out like that,” says Liam. “Most racecourse recumbenci­es are due to a fall or a cardiovasc­ular catastroph­e and in the latter, sadly, the horse usually dies.

“Heat stress is sometimes seen after a race, but more commonly when the horse is walking back after the finish,” he adds. “Edwulf didn’t quite fit that picture. He had some sort of potentiall­y fatal neurologic­al episode, the exact trigger for which was most likely a combinatio­n of factors.

“Rather than signalling the worst, pulling screens around a horse provides a quiet place where the veterinary team can deliver treatment.

“Edwulf was down for almost an hour, which significan­tly reduces the odds of survival, but we were afforded the facilities and the time to allow him to recover.”

“The racecourse vets did a terrific job and encouraged us that he might pull through,” says Joseph, who also praised the hospital staff and his own team for nursing the horse back to health.

“Edwulf is an absolute gentleman and he obviously has a very strong constituti­on. It was a long road to get him back from Cheltenham, when we thought he was gone.”

At the time of going to press, Edwulf is scheduled to run in the Timico Cheltenham Gold Cup on 16 March.

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 ??  ?? Edwulf with vet nurse Harriet Russell at Three Counties Equine Hospital after his recovery from collapsing due to acute oxygen deficit
Edwulf with vet nurse Harriet Russell at Three Counties Equine Hospital after his recovery from collapsing due to acute oxygen deficit
 ??  ?? The fairytale is complete: Edwulf wins the Grade One Irish Gold Cup just eleven months after connection­s
feared ‘he was gone’
The fairytale is complete: Edwulf wins the Grade One Irish Gold Cup just eleven months after connection­s feared ‘he was gone’

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