A lifetime spent with horses and 40 years of practicing veterinary medicine will yield some remarkable stories – and Dr. Mary Bell has a few. As a well-respected horsewoman and equine veterinarian in Puslinch, ON, Dr. Bell estimates she’s performed between 2,500 and 3,000 pre-purchase exams over her career. But one experience with a pre-purchase exam that sticks out in her mind was nearly half a century ago on a large hunter pony. Her father, a hunter-jumper coach and judge in New Jersey, had some clients interested in buying the pony and they hired a local veterinarian to perform a pre-purchase exam. Back then, pre-purchase exams were done on a pass-or-fail basis, and this pony’s radiographs showed changes to the navicular bones, causing her to “fail” the exam. “But the people decided to buy her anyway and at 22 years old, this pony qualified her last child for the Medal and Maclay Finals.”

Most horse people who have been in the business long enough have similar stories – there’s the horse who vetted clean who’s been nothing but lame for his new owner, and the horse who had a questionable pre-purchase exam but ended up being a solid packer for years. It prompts us to question how much horse owners really know about the workings of a pre-purchase exam, as well as the amount of weight we should give it in our decision to buy our next horse.

The components of a pre-purchase exam

While there is no defined system that each veterinarian follows to perform a pre-purchase exam, there are generally accepted rules of practice. The veterinarian should ask the current owner to fill out a health history form about the horse that outlines previous problems, therapies, vaccinations and dewormings.

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