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Information About The Navicular Syndrome

By Karina Frost


The navicular area is a region around the anterior hooves of all stallions. Due to some causes, the navicular syndrome can affect this region. Although this disease is not fatal, it can make the stallion quite uncomfortable stopping it from doing its activities the normal way. A horse that gets the infection can get treated and get back to its daily functions. There are many things that may be done to avoid and to cure the infection.

In order to know if a horse has caught the illness, there are various things that are needed by the veterinary doctor. They usually look at the physical symptoms and also proof from a radiographic test. There are several x-ray examinations that are usually done on the horse because the physical symptoms may be brought about by many other things. This will avoid the giving of wrong medicines.

There are various symptoms that horses with this syndrome demonstrate. First of all, the owner will notice some lameness on the front limbs. In some horses, one of the feet may be lamer but in others both feet get affected. When this happens, the care giver will notice that the horse stumbles when moving. The disease is usually popular on middle aged horses of between seven and fourteen years.

There are various physical tests that may be done to diagnose the syndrome. The first thing to be done is to make observations when these horses are settling down. A horse that is infected will try to take the front limbs forward so that more pressure is put on the hind limbs. The examiner can also make use of hoof testers and that will help to examine the reaction of the horses to pain. The horses that have been infected are also likely to have smaller front hooves because they have been avoiding using them too much for a while.

Anesthesia can also be utilized to help and identify the infected stallions. This is where the medicine is injected to the foot so that the horses cannot feel any pain in the injected area. If the medicine is added to the infected region, the examiner will notice that abnormal behavior will be stopped.

There are various ways that the disease can be handled after it has been detected. One way is through correct shooing. This will help to stabilize the hooves from all sides making the horse more comfortable. There are also some medications that the horses can be given to widen the blood vessels in the affected area. However, many horses take long to react to these treatments.

The owner may also subject the stallion to some exercises that help in increasing blood flow. These exercise procedures should be carried out every day in a week for around an hour. By enhancing the blood flow in the affected region, the horses can be able to exert more pressure on the affected area.

It is not all horses that usually respond to the treatments that have been mentioned above. If a horse shows no change after all the above things have been done, the only option remaining will be to us a surgical procedure to remove the unwanted ligaments that are causing the pain.




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