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Musculoskeletal System
Lameness in Horses
Navicular Disease in Horses
Etiology
Clinical Findings and Diagnosis
Treatment
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Sections in Veterinary Professionals
  • Behavior
  • Circulatory System
  • Clinical Pathology and Procedures
  • Digestive System
  • Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
  • Endocrine System
  • Exotic and Laboratory Animals
  • Eye and Ear
  • Generalized Conditions
  • Immune System
  • Integumentary System
  • Management and Nutrition
  • Metabolic Disorders
  • Musculoskeletal System
  • Nervous System
  • Pharmacology
  • Poultry
  • Reproductive System
  • Respiratory System
  • Toxicology
  • Urinary System
  • Zoonoses
Chapters in Musculoskeletal System
  • Musculoskeletal System Introduction
  • Congenital and Inherited Anomalies of the Musculoskeletal System
  • Dystrophies Associated with Calcium, Phosphorus, and Vitamin D
  • Arthropathies in Large Animals
  • Lameness in Cattle
  • Lameness in Goats
  • Lameness in Horses
  • Lameness in Pigs
  • Lameness in Sheep
  • Myopathies in Ruminants and Pigs
  • Myopathies in Horses
  • Bovine Secondary Recumbency
  • Lameness in Small Animals
  • Arthropathies and Related Disorders in Small Animals
  • Myopathies in Small Animals
  • Osteopathies in Small Animals
  • Sarcocystosis
Topics in Lameness in Horses
  • Overview of Lameness in Horses
  • The Lameness Examination in Horses
  • Imaging Techniques in Equine Lameness
  • Arthroscopy in Equine Lameness
  • Regional Anesthesia in Equine Lameness
  • Osseous Cyst-Like Lesions in the Distal Phalanx in Horses
  • Bruised Sole and Corns in Horses
  • Canker in Horses
  • Fracture of Navicular Bone in Horses
  • Fracture of Distal Phalanx in Horses
  • Keratoma in Horses
  • Laminitis in Horses
  • Navicular Disease in Horses
  • Pedal Osteitis in Horses
  • Puncture Wounds of the Foot in Horses
  • Pyramidal Disease in Horses
  • Quittor in Horses
  • Quarter Crack in Horses
  • Scratches in Horses
  • White Line Disease in Horses
  • Sheared Heels in Horses
  • Sidebone in Horses
  • Thrush in Horses
  • Fracture of Phalanges and Proximal Sesamoids in Horses
  • Osteoarthritis in Horses (Fetlock and Pastern)
  • Palmar/Plantar Osteochondral Disease in Horses
  • Sesamoiditis in Horses
  • Chronic Proliferative Synovitis in Horses
  • Digital Sheath Tenosynovitis in Horses
  • Disorders of the Carpus and Metacarpus in Horses
  • Bucked Shins in Horses
  • Subchondral Bone Disease of the Carpal Bones in Horses
  • Desmitis or Sprain of the Inferior Check Ligament in Horses
  • Fracture of the Carpal Bones in Horses
  • Fractures of the Small Metacarpal and Metatarsal (Splint) Bones in Horses
  • Fracture of the Third Metacarpal (Cannon) Bone in Horses
  • Hygroma in Horses
  • Osteoarthritis in Horses (Carpus and Metacarpus)
  • Osteochondritis Dissecans in Horses
  • Osteochondroma of the Distal Radius in Horses
  • Rupture of the Common Digital Extensor Tendon in Horses
  • Splints in Horses
  • Subchondral Bone Cysts and Septic Arthritis in Horses
  • Suspensory Desmitis in Horses
  • Synovial Hernia and Ganglion and Synovial Fistulae in Horses
  • Tearing of the Medial Palmar Intercarpal Ligament in Horses
  • Tenosynovitis of the Tendon Sheaths Associated with the Carpus in Horses
  • Traumatic Synovitis and Capsulitis in Horses
  • Shoulder Disorders in Horses
  • Elbow Disorders in Horses
  • Disorders of the Tarsus and Metatarsus in Horses
  • Bog Spavin in Horses
  • Bone Spavin in Horses
  • Curb in Horses
  • Displacement of the Superficial Flexor Tendon from the Point of the Hock in Horses
  • Fracture of the Tarsus in Horses
  • Luxation of the Hock in Horses
  • Hindlimb Tendon Ruptures in Horses
  • Rupture of the Peroneus Tertius Muscle in Horses
  • Stringhalt in Horses
  • Thoroughpin in Horses
  • Fractures of the Third Metatarsal Bone in Horses
  • Large Wounds in the Proximal Metatarsal Region in Horses
  • Osteochondrosis of the Stifle in Horses
  • Subchondral Cystic Lesions in Horses
  • Meniscus and Meniscal Ligament Injuries in Horses
  • Cranial and Caudal Cruciate Ligament Injuries in Horses
  • Collateral Ligament Injuries in Horses
  • Intermittent Upward Fixation of Patella and Delayed Patella Release in Horses
  • Fragmentation of the Patella in Horses
  • Patellar Luxation in Horses
  • Patellar Ligament Injuries in Horses
  • Gonitis and Osteoarthritis in Horses
  • Fractures in Horses
  • Disorders of the Hip in Horses
  • Luxation of the Coxofemoral Joint in Horses
  • Pelvic Fracture in Horses
  • Osteoarthritis and other Coxofemoral Joint Diseases in Horses
  • Disorders of the Back and Pelvis in Horses
  • Spinal Processes and Associated Ligaments in Horses
  • Articular Process-Synovial Intervertebral Articulation Complexes in Horses
  • Vertebral Bodies and Disks in Horses
  • Muscle Strain and Soreness in Horses
  • Lumbosacral Junction Abnormalities in Horses
  • Sacroiliac Joint Abnormalities in Horses
  • Tendinitis in Horses
  • Developmental Orthopedic Disease in Horses
  • Osteochondrosis in Horses
  • Physitis in Horses
  • Flexion Deformities in Horses
 
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Navicular Disease in Horses(Palmar foot pain, Podotrochlosis, Podotrochlitis)

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Navicular disease is one of the most common causes of chronic forelimb lameness in the athletic horse but is essentially unknown in ponies and donkeys. Navicular disease is a chronic degenerative condition of the navicular bone that involves: 1) loss of the medullary architecture (with subsequent synovial invagination), 2) bone sclerosis combined with damage to the fibrocartilage on the flexor surface of the bone, 3) traumatic fibrillation of deep digital flexor tendon from contact with the damaged flexor surface of the bone with adhesion formation between the tendon and bone, and 4) enthesiophyte formation on the proximal and distal borders of the bone.

Etiology

The syndrome is likely due to a complex pathogenesis rather than a specific disease entity, although the greatest consensus appears to be that there is a biomechanical component (causing increased bone medullary pressure) and possibly a vascular component. There appears to be a hereditary predisposition, indicated by the sharp decrease in incidence of the disease in Dutch Warmbloods following the disallowance of stallions with severe navicular changes to be certified for breeding. It is considered to be a disease of the more mature riding horse, commonly not appearing until 8–10 yr of age. Conformation of the distal limb is likely to play a large role in the disease process and degree of lameness. Excessive pressure on the navicular bone occurs with a “broken back” hoof-pastern axis, usually accompanied by an underrun heel and excessively long toe. This conformation, leading to excessive concussion between the flexor tendon and the navicular bone, may also cause navicular bursitis, with direct damage to the fibrocartilage of the flexor surface and the collagenous surface of the flexor tendon itself.

Clinical Findings and Diagnosis

The disease is usually insidious in onset. An intermittent lameness is manifest early in the course of the disease. Because disease is bilateral, there may be no obvious head nod to the lameness when the horse is trotted in a straight line, with only a shortened stride present. Lameness is usually exacerbated by lungeing the horse in a circle, with the inside foot usually exhibiting the greatest lameness. In early stages of the disease, the lameness may not be visible even at a lunge until a nerve block is performed on 1 of the 2 digits (ie, the 2 lame feet cancel each other out). A flexion test of the distal forelimb may produce a transient exacerbation of lameness.

Clinical diagnosis is mainly based on the presentation of the animal (age, breed commonly at risk), and, importantly, on the lameness examination including a characteristic response to palmar digital nerve anesthesia. The horses are rarely positive to hoof testers (11% positive in one study). The lameness can be eliminated by palmar digital nerve block. However, as this nerve block anesthetizes the entire sole and coffin joint in addition to the heel, response to the block itself is not diagnostic. A transfer of lameness to the other forelimb, which also is eliminated by a palmar digital nerve block, is necessary for a tentative diagnosis of navicular disease. Anesthesia of the navicular bursa is much more specific, but is not commonly performed during a lameness examination due to the pain involved and complexity of the injection (usually done under radiographic guidance). Radiographic changes are variable and do not always correlate with the severity of lameness. Thus, they are not as important in the diagnosis as the lameness examination. Radiographs may demonstrate a range of degenerative changes involving the navicular bone: marginal enthesiophytes, enlarged synovial fossae (so-called vascular channels) and cysts due to loss of medullary trabecular bone, and flexor surface changes (observed on “skyline” view), including erosions and loss of a defined cortex.

Photographs

Navicular disease

Navicular disease

Treatment

Because the condition is both chronic and degenerative, it can be managed in some horses but not cured. The most common effective treatments include NSAID administration and corrective shoeing. Phenylbutazone is the most commonly used NSAID, but must be used with caution due to adverse effects (renal and GI injury). If used daily, it may be best to take the animal off the drug one day a week to allow the body to clear some of the accumulated drug; the horse can be given flunixin for that day. A safer option is the COX-2-selective NSAID firocoxib, which is fairly effective for orthopedic and articular pain. With severe lameness, rest is indicated.

Foot care should include trimming and shoeing that restores normal phalangeal alignment and balance; response to corrective shoeing commonly takes ~2 wk. The principal object of shoeing is to decrease the pressure on the navicular bone. The shoeing technique that most effectively decreases pressure on the navicular area is raising the heel (usually performed with wedge pads or a wedged shoe). Rolling the toe of the shoe further relieves the pressure on the navicular bone. The egg bar shoe does not decrease navicular pressure in sound horses on a hard surface, but has been reported to effectively decrease forces on the navicular bone in some horses with navicular disease or collapsed heels. Additionally, egg bar shoes are likely to more effectively decrease forces on the navicular area on soft surfaces (that horses are normally worked on); they work somewhat like a snowshoe and do not allow the heel to sink as deeply as a foot with a standard shoe would. Natural balance shoes are ineffective at decreasing navicular pressure.

Injection of the coffin joint with corticosteroids will markedly improve soundness in ~â…“ of horses (for an average of 2 mo), whereas injection of corticosteroid into the navicular bursa is reported to resolve the lameness for an average of 4 mo in 80% of horses that do not respond to standard treatments (phenylbutazone, shoeing, and coffin joint injection). Increased incidence of rupture of the deep digital flexor tendon has been reported with multiple intrabursal injections. Isoxsuprine hydrochloride is ineffective as a vasodilator when administered orally and has little therapeutic value.

Palmar digital neurectomy may provide pain relief and prolong the usefulness of the horse, but no neurectomy should be considered curative. Digital neurectomy has a high incidence of severe complications such as painful neuroma formation and rupture of the deep digital flexor tendon. Other surgical procedures for navicular disease are unproven.

Although the prognosis is guarded to poor, a carefully designed therapeutic regimen can prolong the usefulness of most horses, and the competitive status of many. Over months or years, the majority of affected horses reach a point of nonresponsiveness to treatment.

Last full review/revision March 2012 by Stephen B. Adams, DVM, MS, DACVS; Andrew L. Crawford, BVetMed, CertES (Orth), MRCVS; James K. Belknap, DVM, PhD, DACVS; Jane C. Boswell, MA, VetMB, CertVA, CertES (Orth), DECVS, MRCVS; Peter Clegg, MA, Vet MB, PhD, CertEO, DECVS, MRCVS; Marcus J. Head, BVetMed, MRCVS; C. Wayne McIlwraith, BVSc, PhD, DSc, FRCVS, DACVS; James Schumacher, DVM, MS, DACVS, MRCVS; John Schumacher, DVM, MS, DACVS, MRCVS; Roger K. W. Smith, MA, VetMB, PhD, DEO, DECVS, MRCVS; Chris Whitton, BVSc, FACVSc, PhD; Jean-Marie Denoix, DVM, PhD, Agregé; Joerg A. Auer, DrMedVet, Dr h c, MS, DACVS, DECVS

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