A few nice Bursitis images I found:
Bruise

Image by worldofnic
What the bursitis did next
Image from page 192 of “A text-book of horseshoeing, for horseshoers and veterinarians” (1913)

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Identifier: textbookofhorses01lung
Title: A text-book of horseshoeing, for horseshoers and veterinarians
Year: 1913 (1910s)
Authors: Lungwitz, Anton. [from old catalog] Adams, John William, 1862- [from old catalog]
Subjects: Horseshoeing. [from old catalog]
Publisher: Philadelphia, London, J. B. Lippincott Company
Contributing Library: The Library of Congress
Digitizing Sponsor: Sloan Foundation
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roperly from the coronan,^ band. In dressing the hoof and apply-ing the har-shoe, care must be takenthat the lower border of the wallunderneath the painful area islowered so much that it will notreceive direct pressure from the shoe. (&) Contraction of the Sole.—This is accompanied by an unnatural wide fore-hoof ^-ith coronary ^ J contraction : (a) broad shallow direction of the wall. Instead of the groove in each quarter, and dis-… . , ~ , appearing toward the toe. wall being straight from the coronet to the shoe, it describes a curve whose convexity is outward(keg-shaped, claw-shaped when seen from the side) (Fig. 210).The hoof seems constricted (tied in) at the coronet and at itsplantar border, the sole is abnormally concave (arched), andthe plantar surface of the hoof is considerably shortenedfrom toe to heel. It happens in lx)th shod and unshodhorses, with othemvise strong hoofs, but is quite rare. It isoccasionally associated with navicular bursitis ( naviculardisease ).
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190 HORSESHOEING. Caw^es.—Principally dryness, too little exercise, and shoeswithout horizontal bearing-surface. The treatment is correspondingly simple: The shoes shouldbe flat, fitted full all around to coax the wall out at every point,and the outer border bevelled base-wide, so as to furnish a base of support that is wider and Fig. 210. longer than the hoof. In
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Image from page 198 of “The principles and practice of roentgenological technique” (1920)

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Identifier: principlespracti00hirs
Title: The principles and practice of roentgenological technique
Year: 1920 (1920s)
Authors: Hirsch, Isaac Seth, 1889-1942
Subjects: Radiography
Publisher: New York, American X-Ray Pub. Co.
Contributing Library: Columbia University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Open Knowledge Commons
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nal(Easiest arrangement,completely overlap)Extero-internalOblique Condyles should 5. Postero-anterior Difficulties 1. Joint space is oblique 2. Leg and thigh must be horizontal to get joint spaceNotes: With the leg extended, the jointspace is at the level of the lower surface ofthe patella. If examining for bursitis dontoverexpose or overdevelop. Calcification ofpopliteal arteries may be seen in poplitealspace. Joint bodies may be visible abovepatella between it and the femur. Antero-Posterior Posture (Fig. 246) Thigh and leg must be horizontal Immobilization Fix both legs Tube position Five inch cone, upper edge of cone lJ/2 in-ches (4 cm.) above upper edge of patella Interno-ExternalPosture Trunk on same hip, plate to outer side, kneeextended, other knee extended, abductedand flexed Immobilization Sand bag over leg and middle thigh Tube position Upper edge of 5 cylinder 1^4 aboveupper edge of patella. Patellar shadowis clear of condylar. Central ray goesthrough intercondyloid spines
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Fig. 245 Fig. 246 174 KNEE
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