farrier nailing shoe on horse's hind foot
Shelley Paulson

One often-overlooked strategy in the effort to preserve a horse’s joint health is hoof care. Certain trimming and shoeing techniques can alter a horse’s limb biomechanics—for better or worse. James D. Conway III, DVM, director of veterinary professional services with Contura Vet, explains how regular, high-quality farrier care might improve a horse’s joint health.

This podcast is an excerpt of our Ask TheHorse Live Q&A, “Performance Horse Lameness Problems” Listen to the full recording here.

About the Expert:

Picture of James D. Conway III, DVM

James D. Conway III, DVM

James D. Conway III, DVM, is the Director of Veterinary Professional Services with Contura Vet. Conway has been an industry veterinarian for the past eight years. Prior to his role in industry, he served as an associate veterinarian at a large regional referral lameness and rehab facility in north Texas. Conway is a 2012 graduate of Colorado State University Veterinary School, in Fort Collins, where he was heavily involved with equine stifle and condylar fracture research. Conway completed an internship at Equine Sports Medicine and Surgery in 2013 and upon completion started his own lameness and sports medicine practice in the panhandle of Texas and Oklahoma. Conway has been invited to speak at numerous universities in the U.S. and Canada and at the ACVS and AAEP national conferences. His publications over bisphosphonates, the equine stifle ethesis, and medial condylar fractures can be found in the Equine Veterinary Journal and Equine Veterinary Education.