mercredi 21 novembre 2018

Essential Details About Navicular Horses

By Cynthia Peterson


The horsey domestic animals face a slew of adverse health crises majorly on the foot area due to their racing activities. These crises majorly revolve around the navicular horses which is a degenerative syndrome affecting the scaphoid bone. It is a saucer-like bone impended between the coffin bone and the short pastern bone. The ailment also affects the bursa cushion as well as the DDFT thus resulting in lameness and swelling of the hoof as a result of excessively stressing the feet area.

The swelling is fueled through wearing and tearing as the horse ages whereas the syndrome is commonly evidenced in nag ones. The lameness can affect all horse breeds. However, the impact is usually seen more in some breeds like the warm-bloods and thoroughbreds among others. Overweight horsey animals with reduced hooves are usually at a higher risk profile of palmar foot pain syndrome and other foot conditions.

Non-acquiesce practices increase the chances of developing the caudal pains. This involves the continuous use of mismatching pastern angles. This practice is tragic since it causes the deep digital flexor tendon to overstretch beyond its limit. It thus results in building up of pressure on the scaphoid bone and other adjacent skeletal structures. Failure to follow a scheduled hoof cutting is also a contributing factor that triggers the intensification of palmar foot pain.

The palmar foot pain basically affects only the front feet but with varying intensities. This makes one foot to experience more pain than the other. This attribute is vital in that it enhances the visibility of lameness. It is clearly observed during short-striding where the horse negotiates sharp corners. This is examined through observing the landing posture of feet which should be the heel-to-toe landing and not its complement.

The owners and other personnel have ventured in the use of the radiographing technique in a quest to minimize the adversity of this condition. However, the process has piled continued failures over the decades since it does not account for the relationship between therapeutically altered bones and heel pain. Therefore, this has fueled the use of magnetic resonance imaging which clearly gives finer details of soft tissue structures surrounding the scaphoid bone.

The caudal heel pain syndrome can be managed to reduce the pain and significantly minimize the excessive stress that affects the deep digital flexor tendon. This management can be achieved by staging the equine in a layup period in a stall with a small paddock. This allows the painful structures to have a serene rest for their recovery. The equines should be kept at the correct body weight. Regular hoof trimming should be practiced to maintain the correct hoof angles and pasterns.

Similarly, a therapeutic shoeing culture should also be embraced to foster the horse comfort through balancing enhancement. Some of the affected breeds benefit from medications that are done by injecting the navicular bursa. In some instances of intense pain, the veterinarians may severe the nerves to the affected area. This makes the equine not to feel abscesses, sole bruises, and laminitis that may need alleviating actions or a veterinary.

Thus, the horse navicular syndrome is usually a collective of varied symptoms that cause discomfort to the equines. These conditions can be managed accordingly by use of treatment management techniques. They are designed to increase striding comfort and relieving swelling and tension on the affected areas.




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