Understanding Navicular and Heel Pain in Horses

Veterinarian examining a horse's foot.
Veterinarian examining a horse's foot. Melinda Nagy

Newsdate: Tuesday, May 21, 2019, 9:00 am
Location: SANTA FE, New Mexico

No Hoof. No Horse. Maybe you have heard that old horseman’s saying. There is a lot of truth to it. The foundation of every horse is the foot.

Horse trotting out for a lameness check.

Horse trotting out for a lameness check

Navicular syndrome usually first appears as a very mild lameness that affects both front feet, with one foot often seeming worse than the other..
© 2012 by Mark Sellers

Dr. Doug Thal, the creator of Horse Side Vet Guide, recently wrote a very comprehensive and well-illustrated article on Navicular Syndrome and Heel Lameness in Horses.

Here is an excerpt:

In order to understand navicular syndrome, it’s necessary to understand the basic anatomy of the foot. The equine “foot” includes the hoof capsule and its associated structures, the lower end of the short pastern bone, the coffin bone (P3, Pedal bone) and the navicular bone. There is the “hoof complex” itself – the hoof capsule, sole, frog, digital cushion, and ungual (collateral) cartilages.

The coffin bone takes up approximately 2/3 of the hoof, and it is approximately the shape of the hoof. Running down the back of the limb, diving into the heel of the foot and attaching to the “palm” of the coffin bone, is a wide, flat very dense tendon called the deep digital flexor tendon. The action of the DDFT is to flex the coffin joint and provide the floor of the joint. It courses over the navicular bone, using it as a fulcrum near its attachment to the coffin bone.

What you might observe: Signs of navicular syndrome

“My horse just seems stiff, or short. He’s not really lame, he’s just off…”

Navicular syndrome usually first appears as a very mild lameness that gradually worsens over weeks to months. It usually affects both front feet, but one often seems worse than the other.  As with most lameness, the lameness from navicular syndrome is most noticeable at the trot, resulting in a head-bob.  Affected horses often have a short, choppy trot and canter, and tend to hold their neck and poll rigid. The gradual onset of lameness in both forefeet can mislead riders into thinking that “this is just the way the horse travels”.

Read the complete article here:

https://horsesidevetguide.com/Navicular+Syndrome+%26+Heel+Pain+in+Horses+

This article and thousands of other pages of inter-related equine health records, images, videos, tables, and illustrations, make up Horse Side Vet Guide, a one of a kind online encyclopedia of equine health, and the most highly rated equine health app in the world. Unlike many equine health resources, HSVG is written by an authority- a lifelong horseman and an equine vet with 26 years of clinical experience. It is a tool that no horse person should be without.

To learn more about Horse Side Vet Guide, or to request a media packet for sponsorship, please contact Jamie Samples at jamie@horsesidevetguide.com We have affordable, effective sponsorship opportunities.

The Horse Side Vet Guide smartphone app is available on iTunes and Google Play for Android devices and costs a $4.99 one-time fee.  The app has been downloaded in over 80 countries and is widely considered the best horse health app in the world. The recently rebuilt FREE website is HorseSideVetGuide.com. You can see all the same information here as is contained in the app, but unlike the app, the website requires an Internet connection.

Doug Thal DVM DABVP, Creator of Horse Side Vet Guide

Dr. Thal has been a horseman his entire life. His father was a steeplechase rider and polo player. He grew up on a family cattle and horse ranch in Mora County, New Mexico and has been riding and training horses since early childhood. He has been an equine veterinarian since 1993 working on a mix of performance and pleasure horses. His special interests are lameness and surgery. Thal is board certified by the American Board of Veterinary Practitioners, in Equine Practice. He continues to manage his equine veterinary hospital, Thal Equine, outside of Santa Fe, New Mexico.


Press release provided by Jamie Samples - Horse Side Vet Guide

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