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#1
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#2
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![]() i just read about fog on t'bred times. what horrible news.
and yes, the spleen may not be necessary, but i read that survival of the surgery for this is only 50/50. not exactly good odds...and they are running more tests first. if the cancer has spread than it doesn't seem from their remarks that surgery would still be an option. hoping for good news, that the cancer is still just in the spleen. that in itself is bad enough.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#3
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![]() The article at Bloodhorse.com said the tumor is the size of a football. The Lost in the Fog bashers were right. LITF was running bad because he's not a very good horse. It had nothing to do with the football size tumor on his spleen. LOL.
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#4
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![]() What a hard knocking campaigner he was. He ran wherever and whenever and I'm sure he and his connections had one helluva year last year. I hope he can recover.
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#5
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![]() This is the first time I've heard of cancer in a prominent thoroughbred ... since Bold Ruler died from it in 1971. But his cancer wasn't diagnosed until he was a 15YO.
Does anyone else know of another prominent thoroughbred who developed serious cancer? Or one so young as Lost In The Fog? |
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#7
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Was it during his ten-race winning streak ... or just since his eleventh race? As you say ... it's irrelevant now. Let's just hope he can be treated ... and survive. |
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#9
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![]() This type of cancer presents in horses from 5-10 years old . Easy Goer had cancer at eight . The size of LITF's tumor nearly covers the entire spleen . Oxygenation is aided by the spleen . Draw your own conclusions . This is a very grave situation .
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#10
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![]() Lost in the Fog Has Cancer and Awaits Risky Operation
Article Tools Sponsored By By BILL FINLEY Published: August 17, 2006 Lost in the Fog, a sprinter whose blazing speed has carried him to 10 stakes victories, has been found to have a rare and potentially fatal case of lymphoma. Skip to next paragraph He was taken to a veterinary clinic at the University of California-Davis this week after developing what appeared to be a routine case of colic. While he was there, doctors performed a sonogram that revealed a cantaloupe-size cancerous mass in his spleen, his trainer, Greg Gilchrist, said. The horse’s racing career is over, Gilchrist said, and the focus has shifted to saving his life. “This will not be unlike the situation with Barbaro,” Gilchrist said, adding that the owner Harry Aleo was prepared to spare no expense in an effort to save Lost in the Fog, a 4-year-old colt who won a 2005 Eclipse Award. “We have always put the horse first, and nothing will change,” Gilchrist said. “We will just do the best we can for him.” Gilchrist said that if the cancer went untreated, Lost in the Fog would survive for no more than a year. “We could go with radiation and chemotherapy, but I don’t think that will happen,” Gilchrist said. “We will probably choose to remove his spleen and hope that the cancer has not metastasized and spread.” Few surgeons have performed this type of surgery, Gilchrist said. “The tricky thing is that he is 50-50 to make it through the operation,” he said. Further tests will be done tomorrow to see if the cancer has spread beyond the spleen. If it has, no surgery will be performed, he said. If Lost in the Fog recovers, he could go on to a career as a sire. After winning his first 10 races, including the Grade I King’s Bishop at Saratoga, Lost in the Fog had his lone defeat in 2005 in the Breeders’ Cup Sprint. He was not the same horse this year, losing two of three starts, including a ninth-place finish in his last race, the Smile Sprint Handicap at Calder on July 15. “Something like this is very rare,” the New Jersey-based veterinarian Dr. Allan Wise said. “I don’t think I’ve ever seen a case of lymphoma in a horse that age. Usually, it would involve an older horse, like an old broodmare. I never heard of it in a fairly young, athletic horse. There are some theories that a horse can get this when something goes wrong with the immune system, but we don’t know what or why. That’s why it is usually the very old that get this; their immune systems are too old.” Gilchrist says he thinks the lymphoma was at least partly responsible for Lost in the Fog’s poor form this year. “It could have been there for a year and it’s definitely been there for the last six months,” Gilchrist said. “It shows you that this horse has the heart of a lion. It certainly could explain why he had some subpar performances.” |
#11
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If you guys don't think that a tumor this size was affecting him last month, you need your heads examined. Ask any vet or any trainer and they will tell you that this has certainly been affecting him for some time. It's not an exact science. They couldn't tell you that it was costing him 2 lengths eight months ago and 4 lengths four months ago. They couldn't tell you anything like that but they could certainly tell you that it had a huge effect on him last month. Knowing the size of it right now, we know that it was very advanced a month ago. |
#12
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If you're going to use this illness to "explain" his losses ... when does it stop? Do you go back to his loss to Carthage ... or all the way back to the BC Sprint ... and if so, how do you explain the ten-race winning streak? Let it lie ... and hope the horse comes out OK. |