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Horse Hoof Protection
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Horse Hoof Protection

By Ann Pruitt · Health

Looking for honest, horse-owner perspective on Horse Hoof Protection?

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The Science Behind Modern Hoof Sealants!

Hoof Sealants

by Dr. M. J. Pautienis and Dr. Richard Shakalis researchers for SBS Equine Products Video Support for this Article

Reachers for SBS Equine Products

For hundreds of years people have seen the wisdom of coating horses’ hooves with various substances for their protection and to maintain flexibility. Pine tar, paraffin, oils and salves have been passed down from one generation to the next with varying degrees of success. The basic scientific principles they were trying to achieve, maintaining the internal moisture of the hoof wall while repelling harmful substances are as valid today as they were then. To understand why the modern hoof sealants work so well, let’s review some basic biology and function of the hoof.

The hoof wall is the weight bearing structure of the hoof and it is composed of thousands of tiny

Hoof Graphic showing Tubles.

hollow fibers called tubules. These tubules run vertically from the coronary band and are cemented together with a protein substance called keratin (see figure one). Layer upon layer of these tubules act effectively as springs to absorb tremendous amounts of concussive force while retaining the necessary tensile strength. The elasticity of these tubules and the hoof wall in general is dependent on its internal moisture content. This moisture is not simply water, but a mix of salts and electrolytes much like that found in an I. V. solution. Without this essential moisture, the hoof wall would dry up, crack, become brittle and generally fail at its job of a leaf spring/shock absorber. Too much moisture, on the other hand, can make a hoof too soft, mushy and fail to absorb its concussive load.

We now understand that the ideal hoof conditioner maintains the natural moisture balance found within the hoof wall.

Where does this important moisture come from?

The hoof is designed to receive at least 90 percent of its moisture from within, from the blood and lymph vessels, and a small percentage from the sole. Modern bonded sealants are so effective because they stop the evaporation of this essential moisture from escaping the hoof wall. Attempting to moisturize the hoof wall with grease or salve is mostly futile because the hoof wall is virtually non-absorbent. This is why using hoof conditioners and dressings that contain vitamins or proteins are a complete waste of time. To be of any benefit, proteins and vitamins have to pass through the digestive system and be broken down into useful building blocks by digestive enzymes. Putting vitamins and protein on the hoof wall makes as much sense as trying to eat by sticking your hand in a bowl of soup.

The coronary band is the only place where products meant to condition or increase hoof growth should be applied, and even care should be taken here. This is where, along with the sole, transpiration or “breathing” occurs (see figure 2).

You may ask, “Why don’t wild horses have all of these hoof problems? Why do I need hoof

The hoof breathes through the coronary band.

protection if I don’t have any hoof problems now?” Good questions whose answers lie in domestication of the horse. The periople is the protective covering that evolved to contain natural body fluids within the hoof wall while repelling harmful contaminants. Thus the hoof actually has its own natural, delicate hoof sealant. This natural sealant serves wild horses well, but it is usually lost in a domestic environment. It is inadvertently removed during the shoeing process when the hoof is trimmed, balanced, leveled and shod. To compound the problem further, the domestic horse can no longer roam free over miles of open space but is confined to smaller pastures, paddocks, and stalls. Now, with little or no natural sealant left and with the horn tubules opened from nail holes and rasping, hooves are exposed to higher concentrations of destructive uric acid and other contaminants.

With the protective outer covering removed, the introduction of these agents into the hoof wall can lead to breakdown of its protein, keratin. It is important to remember that because the hoof is protein, it is potentially biodegradable. Domesticated horses need a hoof conditioner that effectively replaces the periople.

Your grandfather and his grandfather before him intuitively used a type of hoof conditioner called pine tar. This product acted as a precursor to the modern sealants as it helped to retain moisture in the hoof wall. Pine tar, unfortunately, had its drawbacks, but Grandpa was on the right track. Later came various products that contained oils, paraffin derivatives (wax) and petroleum-based ingredients that were used with limited success to coat the hoof and fill in the nail holes.

Hoof conditioners containing tar, paraffin, petroleum derivatives or especially protein and vitamins are not inert and tend to breakdown with time when exposed to the environment. These dressings are usually sticky, and as such, attract contaminants instead of repelling them. Their applications actually may be counter-productive because they can serve as a bacterial and/or fungal growth medium when they fester in a small crack or nail hole. These organisms produce enzymes and exotoxins that can break down collagen and protein in the hoof wall. If you do not get hoof wall disease, the least that can happen is that the hoof can get soft and punky at the nail holes. If this happens, your horse will throw more than his fair share of shoes. The ideal hoof conditioner should be stable when cured, able to seal out harmful contaminants and resistant to abrasion.

Other added ingredients found in some hoof conditioners, formaldehyde and acetone, are powerful drying agents and can be downright harmful to horses, humans and the environment. Their use has been associated with cancer and liver damage. Use them with caution, or better yet, not at all. Further, these sealants or dressings do not have any resistance to abrasion and can be easily wiped off. As a result, they need to be reapplied frequently, even daily, to get the maximum benefit.

The new generation of hoof conditioners is a spin-off from the field of dentistry. For years, dentists have been coating children’s teeth with bonded sealants to keep them protected against tooth decay . When someone had the idea to try this same technique and apply it to horses hooves, the new generation of bonded hoof coatings was born.

These bonded coatings far outperformed the old oils and pine tars and are extremely effective at sealing in the essential moisture and sealing out the harmful substances.

There are two classes of modern hoof sealants. The first one is based on methyl cellulose, the main ingredient found in fingernail polish. The drawbacks with these coatings are its thin, watery nature that tends to make it wear rapidly and not fill in cracks and nail holes effectively. The other class is urethane based, an extremely tough, inert, flexible polymer. Recent breakthroughs include urethane coatings that contain millions of tiny micro-fibers in each bottle. These coatings that contain the fibers, fill in small cracks and nail holes and tend to wear much longer between applications.

Tiny openings on the hoof wall, from cracks and nail holes, are the main pathways for infection from bacteria, fungus, or other contaminants. Modern technology has given us new products that are now available. With products like these even grandpa would approve! Video Support for this Article

Contact: Our Friendly Staff 3888 Mannix Dr., Unit 303 Naples, Florida 34114 Phone: 239-354-3361 Email: info@sbsequine.com Website: www.sbsequine.com

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Key Article Takeaways
  • Use them with caution, or better yet, not at all.
  • The hoof is designed to receive at least 90 percent of its moisture from within, from the blood and lymph vessels, and a small percentage from the sole.
  • This is where, along with the sole, transpiration or “breathing” occurs (see figure 2).
  • Pine tar, paraffin, oils and salves have been passed down from one generation to the next with varying degrees of success.
  • To understand why the modern hoof sealants work so well, let’s review some basic biology and function of the hoof.
Questions readers commonly ask:
What's the right way to protect my horse's hooves?

Per Drs. Pautienis and Shakalis: domesticated horses lose their natural periople — the protective covering that contains internal body fluids and repels contaminants — through routine trimming, balancing, and shoeing. Wild horses keep theirs because their hooves aren't worked on. Domesticated horses need a hoof conditioner that effectively replaces the periople.

The structural recommendation: a modern bonded sealant that stops moisture from evaporating out of the hoof wall while sealing out destructive contaminants like uric acid and bacteria from urine and manure. Per the article, the ideal hoof conditioner should be stable when cured, able to seal out harmful contaminants, and resistant to abrasion. The hoof receives 90% of its moisture from inside (blood and lymph) and only a small percentage from the sole — so trying to moisturize from the outside with grease or salve is mostly futile because the hoof wall is virtually non-absorbent.

How do I know if my hoof dressing is failing?

Per Drs. Pautienis and Shakalis: the failure pattern is predictable and visible.

  • Hoof gets soft and "punky" at the nail holes — the dressing has degraded and bacteria or fungi have colonized the small openings around the nails.
  • Horse throws more than his fair share of shoes — the punky horn can no longer hold the nail.
  • Cracks deepen instead of stabilizing — the dressing isn't filling them, or worse, is festering inside them.
  • Frequent reapplication required — daily or near-daily means the product has no abrasion resistance and isn't sealing.

Per the article: "Tiny openings on the hoof wall, from cracks and nail holes, are the main pathways for infection." If your dressing isn't closing those openings, it's working against you. Sole-side products like Durasole by Alvin Farrier Supply (a current InfoHorse advertiser) are designed for sole-hardening specifically — a different category from hoof-wall sealants but useful when sole softening is the failure mode.

What's the difference between pine tar, oils, and modern hoof sealants?

Per Drs. Pautienis and Shakalis: the categories are not equivalent.

  • Pine tar, paraffin, and petroleum-derived dressings — Grandpa's products. Help retain moisture but break down with environmental exposure, are sticky, and attract contaminants instead of repelling them. Can fester in cracks and nail holes, growing bacteria and fungi.
  • Oils and salves — limited absorption (the hoof wall is non-absorbent), so they coat rather than condition.
  • Methyl-cellulose sealants (related to fingernail polish) — thin and watery, wear quickly, don't fill cracks effectively.
  • Urethane-based sealants — the modern category. "Extremely tough, inert, flexible polymer." Recent versions contain micro-fibers that fill small cracks and nail holes and wear longer between applications.

Per the article: the urethane-with-fiber design was a spin-off from dental bonded sealants used to coat children's teeth — the same chemistry adapted to hoof horn.

Where should I actually apply hoof conditioner — and where shouldn't I?

Per Drs. Pautienis and Shakalis: the coronary band is the only place where conditioning or hoof-growth products should be applied, and even there with care. Why: the coronary band, along with the sole, is where transpiration or "breathing" occurs — it's the live tissue that can absorb nutrients and moisture. Putting vitamins or proteins on the dead hoof wall "makes as much sense as trying to eat by sticking your hand in a bowl of soup," per the article.

For the hoof wall itself, the job is sealing — not feeding. Internal hoof health depends on diet, blood circulation, and lymph supply, not topical nutrition. Hoof-growth supplements like Farrier's Magic Plus™ Hoof Supplement (a current InfoHorse advertiser) work through the digestive system, where vitamins and proteins are broken down into useful building blocks by digestive enzymes. The structural decision: seal the wall externally, feed the hoof internally — the two are different jobs requiring different products.

Are there ingredients in hoof products I should avoid?

Per Drs. Pautienis and Shakalis: formaldehyde and acetone are the two ingredients to flag. Both are powerful drying agents and can be "downright harmful to horses, humans and the environment." Per the article: "Their use has been associated with cancer and liver damage. Use them with caution, or better yet, not at all."

Two other categories to be skeptical of: products containing tar, paraffin, or petroleum derivatives are not inert — they break down with time and environmental exposure, attracting contaminants and serving as bacterial or fungal growth media when they fester in cracks. Products with proteins or vitamins on the hoof wall are wasted — the wall doesn't absorb them. The structural rule: read the label, prefer urethane-based bonded sealants, avoid drying agents and oxidizable carriers. The hoof horn is itself a protein and is potentially biodegradable; the dressing should protect it, not sit on top fermenting.

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