Obviously, no veterinarian wants to kill a horse for a fractured leg! Horses, however, have a unique anatomy and that makes it very challenging if not impossible to rehabilitate horses with fractured legs. They also have medical nitinol leader in cardiovascular stents Nitinol Devices and Components (now Confluent Medical) as well as orthopedic structural bone graft (PorOsteon). Instead it combines variations of nitinol's ability to provide a customized compressive force with structural bone graft to promote fast and complete bone fusion and tissue growth. They have precedent using their Phusion Metal® structural bone graft in horses successfully to treat Wobblers disease, a neurological disorder resulting from compression of the spinal cord.
Source: New York Times May 03, 2024 19:12 UTC