T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1738.1 | my experience with navicular diagnosis | TLE::EQUUS::LIEB | | Thu May 13 1993 09:00 | 36 |
| Maybe my story will help. My, now 22yo, gelding was diagnosed with
navicular when he was about 11yo (before I got him). Similar story to
yours, very lame, no obvious cause, 100% sound with the block. He was
x-rayed for navicular. He showed "navicular changes". Diagnosis:
navicular. He is shod with wedge pads. I come along 1 year later. I
start exercising him. Never takes a lame step. After 6 mo they offer
to give me the horse (1$, some say I spent too much but that's a
different story ;-)). I read up on navicular and, based on what I know
about his case (which I considered inconclusive) I take him. Now, 10
years later that old boy has never taken a lame step. I continue to
shoe him with wedge pads. I had a new vet out last year and I ask
about the original navicular diagnosis. He pressure tests the horse
and feels the horse does NOT have navicular. Unlikely he would have
stayed so sound all these years. His build is a classic one for having
the disease.
So, what I'm getting at is that this "navicular" diagnosis is not one
of these 100% certain things. Especially based on one lamness episode.
I have no idea how long you would have to "wait and see". I'm still
waiting 10 years later. I'm now convinced my big guy doesn't have it. I
keep him shod for it as a preventative measure since he'd be inclined
toward it due to his build and previous occupation (event horse).
In addition I have a small pony (10h) who has been off and on lame all
the years I've had him (9yrs). No one knows why, farrier, vet, etc.
*I* finally decide he just has tender feet so I buy him little tiny
Easyboots for the front feet. You've never seen such a happy guy. He
doesn't have to wear them all the time but I have him wear them when
the footing demands it and often after he is trimmed. I haven't seen
him take a lame step since I got them last November. You can't tell my
pony his feet don't get sore or bruised.
FWIW that's my experience with "undiagnosible" lamness (i.e. no foreign
object, no abcess, etc.)
Good luck. Jeannie
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1738.2 | who can tell? | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Thu May 13 1993 12:50 | 6 |
| Horses don't always show typical symptoms with lamenesses. My horse
was lame up front last summer, with swelling and heat from the the
fetlock joint to the knee. No digital pulse, negative to hoof testers
and no heat in hoof. Positive to ankle flexion. Vet diagnoses ankle
sprain. A couple days later, he blew an abcess out his heel -- swelling,
heat and lameness disappeared immediately.
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1738.3 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Thu May 13 1993 13:17 | 11 |
| A couple more questions:
Is the horse shod now?
Did the (local) vet - the one that gave the navicular diagnosis - take any
radiographs (x-rays) of the front feet?
Was this horse in a turnout situation that could have been unkind to his feet?
How old is the horse in question?
Can you have this horse for some trial period before you have to make a full
committment to it?
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1738.4 | | CSCMA::SMITH | | Thu May 13 1993 13:42 | 11 |
| Yes, the horse is shod now.
No, no more xrays, I've already spent enough on this horse, besides,
the vet said she's seen horses have terrible x-rays and never have a
lame day, and vice versa.
Turnout is ok, not great, he also runs a lot whinneying when I take my
other horse out.
The horse is eight.
I can keep him for a trial longer, but he's a real sweetheart, we can
really get attached.
Sharon
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1738.5 | Stone Bruises | INGOT::ROBERTS | | Thu May 13 1993 14:39 | 11 |
| re .2
Yeah, those abcesses can masquerade as *anything*! One of my horses
used to get them all the time, apparently from stone bruises, until we
moved to a place with less rocky paddocks. And his symtpoms would be
very different from one bruise to the next -- not surprising since they
were in differing locations in his hoof. Once we though he had a
fetlock strain, another time it seemed like navicular. Then the vet
and I learned that he was just having his yearly abcess...
-ellie
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1738.6 | I can relate! | SALEM::ROY_K | | Thu May 13 1993 16:22 | 30 |
| I was just reading an article somewhere (I can't remember where) of a
study that some Veterinary school did on Navicular disease and how they
looked at navicular bones of horses that should have been absolutely
dead lame and had never taken a lame step, and vice versa (the study
was done on dead horses).
Anyways, I have found that veterinarians tend to differ on opinions on
the same horse. My horse was off 6 months ago due to a quarter crack
originating at the coronary band and she was just a tiny bit off but
enough that I could see it so I had her checked out by one vet who said
she shouldn't be off from the crack and gave her a block and diagnosed
navicular disease. I have another vet (# 2) look at and X-Ray again 4
months later and tells me that yes, it could be quarter crack and we
change her shoes a bit and she is sound from then on. 4 months from
that X-Ray (this is the 3rd set of X-Rays) and the horse is still sound
but someone would like to buy her and this vet says Navicular series is
in the "upper range of normal" and COULD get Navicular disease! This
vet took 18 X-Rays (glad I wasn't paying that bill!) and also saw some
fusion in her left hock (not sure which bones) again, NEVER lame.
According to vet #3, this (hock fusion) could be a problem sometime
down the road as a Dressage horse but would vet horse out as a pleasure
horse. The woman who wanted to buy her was a beginner and several
years away from any upper level dressage work. Oh yes, and when a hock
fuses the horse will probably go off on the opposite front while it is
active.
Karen
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1738.7 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Thu May 13 1993 17:02 | 13 |
| Since you can keep the horse for a while longer on trial, I would
pound on him (use him) as much as possible during that time. If he does not
go lame with the heavy use, chances are, he may be fine. As I've come
to realize, every sound day you get with a horse is a gift, and there's
no way to predict what will or will not hold up. You can only make
educated guesses. Some of us get more gifts than others.
He could have been reacting to having very short feet, either from
wear or from being trimmmed just a little too closely. If that was the case,
time will heal as the foot grows.
If it's navicular that's bothering him, the heavy use should bring it back, if
it's to a degree that would hinder your normal use of the horse.
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1738.8 | Questions questions and more questions | WMOIS::LAPIERRE_K | | Thu May 13 1993 20:53 | 9 |
|
i have a few questions, what exactly is navicular disease, and
What is the price of xrays, oh and one more thing please,
What is the approximate cost of vet checks. Very interesting topic
Thanks alot
Karen
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1738.9 | Only what I've read or been told | CSCMA::SMITH | | Fri May 14 1993 10:05 | 20 |
| I'm no expert but the navicular bone is a small bone in about the
center of the foot. From what I've learned just recently, Navicular
disease is a soreness in this area, caused by the burstus? sp?, the
tissue which covers the navicular bone. If the x-rays show bone
deterioration then navicular soreness may result, BUT not neccessarily,
and vice versa. X-rays are only a guideline, but naturally if the bone is
rough and deteriorated, the burstis may be or will be damaged.
If a horse is inactive for a period of time, the burstis may heal but
after use again it will break down quickly, (this is what I was told
may be the reason my horse vetted out just fine and then went downhill
so fast, but how did he recover so quickly?, I don't know)
My vet check basic price was about $100. My X-rays cost about
$45/hock but I can't remember if that was one picture of each or two.
I do know that more are taken when the front feet are x-rayed
(generally). Add the farm call in separately ($25 - 30).
Sharon
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1738.10 | What kind of block? | LEVADE::DAVIDSON | | Fri May 14 1993 10:24 | 28 |
|
You mentioned that your horse went sound after blocking... did your vet do
a partial block first? Or a full block?
My horse went dead lame last summer... DEEP STONE BRUISE. I had farrier out
(who claimed all was well, no sign of bruising, no reaction to hoof testers).
Then I called the vet. He attacked the foot with the hoof testers, watched
the horse go and did a partial block... horse went *very sound* (leaping
around, happy, etc - big change from the depressed, ouchy critter I led out).
Vet dug around and though he didnt' find an abcess, he did find bruising.
Soaking and easy boot for a couple of weeks (to draw out any abcess), before
shoes with pads.
The partial block wouldn't hide problems with navicular changes, coffin bone,
coffin joint, or higher on the leg.
Lastly, the fact my horse didn't have pads on to begin with was my fault.
I should have realized that the footing was getting hard and the rocks were
surfacing in his pasture. I should have insisted on pads.
If your horse was accustomed to softer footing during turn out and work than
he's gotten since his move, he could be ouchy from the change. Pads may be
in his future. A 2nd opinion to your local vet diagnosis may also help...
Good Luck!
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1738.11 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Fri May 14 1993 10:55 | 7 |
| I just re-read your base note. It seems strange that the horse had
very short feet, but was due for a trim in 1 1/2 weeks. It also seems
very possible that he just got trimmed too short originally and was
sore and then maybe got a stone bruise. They are not always real
visible.
mary
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1738.12 | Navicular dissertation follows | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Fri May 14 1993 11:08 | 51 |
| (disclaimer: I'm not a vet, I don't play one on TV, I just happen to have been
doing some light research...)
The navicular bone is indeed a small bone in the foot. Due to it's location, it
tends to be the major shock absorber of each footfall. Character cell terminals
don't lend themselves to drawing, but the *general* location is
/
--o
where -- is the coffin bone, o is the navicular, and / is the lower pastern
bone. If I remember correctly, it is held in place by the low branches of
the suspensory. Every time the horse puts his foot down, this joint flexes to
some degree, and the navicular bone absorbs much of the impact from the pastern.
Being the 'hinge' in the joint, the navicular bone takes a lot of impact.
Navicular disease is, in layman's terms, osteoporosis of the navicular bone.
In other words, the bone develops lesions, or holes in it. It starts life looking
like a dense sponge. As navicular disease progresses, that sponge becomes less
and less dense, and less able to absorb the concussions of each footfall. Vets
say that a horse has 'navicular changes' when the x-rays show the bone becoming
less dense. (The bone becoming less dense is a natural aging process, so
some changes are expected as the horse ages, but in some horses degeneration
occurs faster.)
Common treatments for navicular disease include, but are not limited to,
1) Changing the angle of the hoof. By raising the heel, you decrease the
amount of direct concussion that the navicular takes, and redistribute it to
other structures in the hoof.
2) Adding bar shoes. This provides extra support for the entire hoof,
distributing more of each footfall concussion to the surrounding tissues.
3) Various regimens of the drug Isoxuprine. This drug is a vasodialator (opens
the blood vessels). It basically increases the circulation in an area that
has notoriously poor circulation anyhow.
4) Nerving the horse. This is cutting the nerve that goes to the navicular
(heel) area.
Common wives-tales surrounding navicular disease:
1) Quarter horses get it. (Navicular is not confined to quarter horses, although
there may have a higher occurrence in this breed than in others. This may be
due to the breeding practices of small feet in relation to the size of the
horse (smaller area to disperse concussion over). Just because you have a
TB, or a <insert your favorite breed here> doesn't mean you don;t
2) Big feet won't develop N. (not true)
3) I won't ever be able to jump my horse again (Not necessarily true. There is
nothing that determines the rate of degeneration, other than periodic x-rays.
If you find a treatment that works well for your horse, you can do whatever
you like with him as long as he remains comfortable. You need to find that
out for yourself)
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1738.13 | more please.... | KAHALA::HOLMES | | Fri May 14 1993 11:48 | 14 |
| re: .6
> Oh yes, and when a hock
> fuses the horse will probably go off on the opposite front while it is
> active.
Can you expand on this ?
I think you just diagnosed the TB I'm 1/2 leasing.
She had the vet inject his hock so it would fuse faster & did
acupuncture for a sore back.
He was getting better until he got new shoes without pads about
2 weeks ago. Now he's off in front.
Bill
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1738.14 | | CARTUN::MISTOVICH | depraved soul | Fri May 14 1993 12:56 | 11 |
| Thank you, Cathy, for the detailed info on navicular.
One thing I would consider, too, if I were the base noter, is what I
was using the horse for. Light pleasure work on soft ground would seem
less likely to cause problems than heavy training.
FWIW, I've known one horse for 2 years that I've just learned has
navicular disease -- I would never have guessed that he had a problem.
Turns out he was diagnosed several years back...
mary
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1738.15 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Fri May 14 1993 13:47 | 15 |
| Bill,
Hind end lamenesses are more difficult to diagnose. Head bobbing (normal
sign of lameness) is more perceptable when the front end is sore, although
you may see it to a degree when the hind end is sore. It is easier to see
hind end lamenesses directly from behind (difficult to do without a second
person). Usually lameness is seen at the trot, which is a diagonal gait. If
the hind is sore, it often looks like the opposite front is the one with the
problem. Horses also change (often imperceptably) the way they hold or
carry themselves when something is bothering them. This often causes
compensatory lamenesses in other parts of the body. Flexion tests and blocks
are generally used to try to pinpoint which joint the soreness is in.
kathy
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1738.16 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Fri May 14 1993 14:46 | 13 |
| I know of several horses with navicular who have been used as light
pleasure/trail horses for years with no problems. One in particular
has just recently (last fall) been retired from being a lesson horse
at Brindle Ledge Farm after many years (his name is Garfield, for any
Brindle Ledge people here, I know he was quite popular there). He is
now stable at my neighbors house, where after the winter off and
corrective shoeing he is doing fine and frequently does 5 - 20 mile
trail rides with no problems, his 'mother' expects to get many more
years with him this way....which actually surprised me a little, I
trailered him home for them last fall, he was barefoot and dead lame
in both front feet, he looked in so much pain at the time I wondered
why they'd adopted him at all, but it seems to have worked out.
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1738.17 | so, what did you decide to do? | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Tue May 18 1993 12:13 | 0 |
1738.18 | Well, it was worth a try. | CSCMA::SMITH | | Tue May 18 1993 15:18 | 6 |
| Well, he went lame again, if we start to use him (lunge him or
anything), he might not show the lameness then, but he's very sore the
day after and the next few. I guess he'll be going back.
Thanks for all the advice,
Sharon
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