Anyone who has witnessed a horse suffering from an acute episode of laminitis knows the heart-wrenching feeling of inadequacy, of being unable to help relieve the pain despite veterinary intervention. Sadly, laminitic episodes often turn into a waiting game to see if the horse will respond to therapies and begin to mend. One important way to assess the adequacy of treatment in cases of laminitis involves evaluation of pain.
Many pain-assessment tools and scales in horses, such as the Obel grading system, rely on the evaluation of movement. In cases of laminitis, this is neither feasible nor humane for many horses.
As all horsemen appreciate, horses communicate using a myriad of methods, including facial expressions. This realization led a group of researchers to determine whether an expression-based pain-coding system, dubbed the “horse grimace scale” or HGS, could be used instead of making painful horses walk and move.
In fact, observers need only assess six facial actions: