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Purdue Equine Hospital Team Comes to Aid of Horse Injured in Severe Storm in Michigan

A horse is pictured wearing a mask that covers some of the face in order to protect it after suffering injuries from a storm
Sassy, a Quarter-Horse from Michigan, wears her custom 3D-printed mask to protect her eye as it heals after being injured in a severe storm.

For a horse named Sassy, Purdue Veterinary Medicine’s Brunner Equine Hospital proved to be the right place at the right time to recover from a scary accident that happened during a severe storm in Michigan two weeks ago.  According to Dr. Danielle Cucuzella, Purdue visiting assistant professor of large animal surgery, the Quarter Horse named Sassy was seriously hurt during near 100 mile-per-hour winds where she lived in Saint Louis, Michigan. 

“Due to severe trauma to Sassy’s face, skull, sinuses, and left orbit [eye socket] after being struck by a fallen tree limb during the storm, Sassy was seen by her local veterinarian and then referred and hospitalized for emergency stabilization by our colleagues at Michigan State University,” Dr. Cucuzella explained. Initial evaluation and x-rays showed severe fractures to multiple bones of her skull and face. “Additional imaging in the form of CT was recommended in order to more precisely map the damage,” Dr. Cucuzella said. Once she was stable enough for travel, Sassy was sent to Purdue where a standing CT of her head and neck were performed in the Brunner Equine Hospital.

A group of equine veterinary medicine staff stand next to a horse, with a brown fence between them
The Purdue University Veterinary Hospital Equine Surgery team looks on as Sassy takes her first steps outdoors wearing her protective mask Friday, May 29.

“This scan unfortunately showed that there was much more extensive damage deeper in the skull, including multiple fractures of her orbit that were in danger of damaging her globe [eyeball] or optic nerve at any time if displaced,” Dr. Cucuzella shared. “This would result in Sassy losing her vision or her eye completely. For that reason, it was decided to pursue additional protective measures. Sassy’s CT was used to build her a 3D-printed reconstruction external fixation helmet to protect her eye and other important structures during healing.”

Together, the large animal surgery, diagnostic imaging, and ophthalmology services worked with the help of expertise from Purdue’s School of Aeronautics and Astronautics to 3D print Sassy a protective helmet that would hopefully prevent her fractured bones from dislodging and causing further complications, and allowing them time to heal.

A large group of veterinary medicine professionals are standing in a white room with a horse.
Sassy with her Equine Surgery Team in the Brunner Equine Hospital (l-r): Emma Zaicow, third-year veterinary student; Sarah Larsen, veterinary assistant, large animal; Dr. Danielle Cucuzella, visiting assistant professor of large animal surgery; Micah Black, veterinary assistant, large animal surgery; Dr. Alexandra Usimaki, large animal surgery resident; Dr. Michelle Tucker, assistant professor of large animal surgery; and Ece Inanc, graduate research assistant.

The helmet has the appearance of a black mask that covers just the side of her face that was injured, giving her a Phantom of the Opera-esque look, and she wore it without objection as she recovered at the Equine Hospital.  With the recovery progressing smoothly, Sassy was released from the hospital Monday, June 1, to go home with her owner to continue recovering there.

“She has a great prognosis for survival, and with the addition of our 3D printed helmet, she also now has a good prognosis for maintaining her vision and hopefully can soon get back to the young child who rides her,” Dr. Cucuzella said. 

Sassy’s treatment proved to be a total team effort that even linked veterinary medicine and engineering, with the guidance of Dr. Michelle Tucker, assistant professor of large animal surgery, who also holds an engineering degree and works with 3D printing as part of her research. And just in time to help with Sassy’s care and treatment, she added a new research team member, Ece Inanc, a graduate research assistant currently working toward earning a PhD from the School of Aeronautics and Astronautics in Purdue’s College of Engineering. 

Two people are standing next to a horse. The person on the far right is holding a piece of medical equipment and the horse is wearing a recovery mechanism on its face
Dr. Michelle Tucker, engineer and board-certified large animal surgeon, and her graduate research assistant, Ece Inanc, show one of the 3-D printed masks they prepared for Sassy.

A big thank you to PVM’s Equine Surgery team for providing excellent care and treatment of Sassy, who hopefully will once again be able to carry her young rider at her home in Michigan.

Writer(s): Kevin Doerr | pvmnews@purdue.edu

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