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Indepth Equine Podiatry Symposium Notes Evaluating the Navicular Bone |
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Much has been written about this small but very significant bone found in the heel area of the horse's foot. The term navicular disease sounds benign enough and many believe it to be a specific disease that is easily diagnosed. However, the contrary would be more exact. In spite of intense efforts by researchers, anatomists, pathologists, surgeons and diagnosticians, this area continues to hold many secrets. The syndrome itself is very complex as it involves not only the bone itself, but also adjacent support structures and anatomical zones that house or protect this very sensitive area. Therefore, diagnosing navicular disease is not straightforward and should never be approached with a black and white attitude. Many years ago it was thought that increased pain identified by hoof testers over the center frog across the heels, a positive response from a PD nerve block and a lollipop or two in the 65° DP radiograph was all that was needed for a navicular diagnosis. However, there are many horses with very significant appearing lesions that never develop soundness problems and remain competitive at high levels and others that have no demonstrable lesions but have chronic heel pain. Treating navicular disease can be just as confusing as diagnosing it. Often the coffin joints and/or bursa may be injected with hydrochloric acid and/or corticosterioids. The horse is then sent to the farrier, who is expected to provide a solution given only a very generic prescription: raise the heel and rocker the toe and/or apply an egg bar shoe with wedge. This can be a difficult task without a point of reference. Treatment can be further complicated if the horse is on a tough training schedule, and the owner, trainer, etc. are reluctant to rest him unless absolutely necessary. You must ask yourself, how can such a complex, mysterious syndrome have such a vague treatment plan? Examining the unique characteristics of each case and determining the mechanical needs of the foot in question, rather than the syndrome as a whole, can provide a host of treatment options that can set the stage for successful treatment and management of this syndrome, lifting some of the stigma that has long been attached to it. Examining the Foot Developing an astute eye for detail can help all concerned detect unique characteristics that can alert us to potential problems, prevent lameness issues and show the effect of chronic problems. When evaluating the exterior of the foot, avoid lumping all feet into the same category as other feet. As we well know, feet are not born equal and certainly don't remain in a static state. They are constantly changing due to growth, use, wear, trimming, shoeing and pathology. The unique characteristics of feet become more noticeable as you develop your eye for detail. Studying photos taken perpendicular to the subject is a great way to train your eye to see these characteristics. Radiographs taken in the same plane can help us tie the external characteristics with what is happening inside. Given time and keen focus, we can begin to see the imaginary radiograph as we look at the foot and vice versa. The basic points of interest that make feet appear different are hoof angle, growth rings and shape of the toe, quarters, heel and ground surface. There are several stereotype feet within all breeds with a large range of foot sizes, shapes and growth patterns. The majority of horses regardless of breed will have a high/low syndrome (one foot has a steeper hoof angle with more heel mass). Even though it can be very subtle, the highest profile foot will have characteristics of a low grade club foot. These small differences influence the overall health of the feet. Growth rings that are quite close together indicate slow growth. This may occur at the toe with club feet, the heel with the negative PA foot, the medial quarter for horses that naturally list to the medial quarter, etc. Wide growth rings indicate accelerated growth and can occur at the heel in club and laminitis feet and at the toe in negative PA feet. The amount of sole depth can greatly affect the way we evaluate and treat navicular cases, therefore it is important to note this important measurement and identify what category it falls under:
Wall thickness goes along with the thickness and durability of the sole. The thinner the sole, the thinner and more fragile the wall and vice versa. Pastern alignment in the healthy foot will lie in the same plane as the face of the hoof wall. The club foot pastern sets forward on the hoof, which puts the linear face in the same plane as the hoof. The heel and buttress shape varies greatly depending on PA and foot mass. The club or upright foot has adequate to excessive heel mass, which creates a thicker, more durable appearing heel. The bar size, shape and overall strength is relative to hoof shape, PA and overall health of the foot. The frog plays a major role in protecting the heel structure, aiding circulation to the foot and acting as a major energy sink when healthy. Note the width, depth and length and compare it to the frog on the opposite foot. Seldom are they identical. The higher heel will normally have a smaller frog set well into the depths of the heel. It will be quite small compared to that on the opposite, lower profile foot. The crushed heel foot will normally have a large, thick frog that may be well below the crushed heel tubules. Observing these basic characteristics every time you look at a foot soon helps you develop an astute eye for detail. The success of any and all therapeutic shoeing protocols is relative to the amount of foot mass and PA that we have to work with. Farriers need radiographic information and an eye for external characteristics that indicate what is available for them to work with. Hoof Testers Use hoof testers carefully when diagnosing a foot problem. A tough, dry foot with good mass will be unresponsive even when brewing a full blown abscess. A soft but fragile foot with minimal mass will be responsive even when the only pathology present is lack of foot mass. Young training horses almost always test sore over the frog and across the heel, which is more often than not just part of training soreness. Stop and ask yourself just how many sensitive structures are being influenced by the testers. Hoof testers are great for quickly locating commonly occurring abscesses, but be careful how you read the response when using them routinely for generalized foot lameness. Radiographic Exam Radiographs are certainly indicated when navicular syndrome is suspected. The views you take are relative to the information you seek. I never rely on one view to confirm a lesion. If I can't see it on at least three views I am not satisfied it exists. Note that if you use a digital unit you may find it difficult to penetrate the navicular bone enough to read the trabecula pattern. I prefer traditional film with grid over the majority of digitals I have used as I can design my exposure any way I need it. Digital does not allow this flexibility and the resolution and detail of portable digital units does not meet the standard consistently attained with my traditional film/grid combination. Yes, you can enhance the digital image by adjusting the contrast, but only within the range of the unit's programming. This can be a disadvantage, especially when you need to shift either well below or above the pre-set range of penetration. Before referring to traditional film grid techniques as dinosaur technology, take a very close look at the lesion that can easily be demonstrated with a versatile technique that you most likely will never see with your digital unit. My preferred radiographic views for identifying navicular lesions are as follows:
![]() Using the lateral low beam radiograph, measure the TSA of the navicular bone. Use this angle as a guide when designing your shoeing protocol for reducing tendon tension. Also note bone angle, as it can vary greatly between horses and on the same horse. Once I have found lesions in the above mentioned views, I confirm them with the following views:
The gold standard when using traditional film and a 6:1 grid is to strive to take all film with a perpendicular beam/film relationship. Center the beam on the subject of interest, use adequate KV and MAS to penetrate the bone and optimum resolution and detail can be obtained. Management I like to think we are managing navicular disease instead of treating it. Normally speaking, navicular disease can't be cured, but the painful tissue can heal given the proper environment and the horse can most often be useful once again. Squaring or rockering the toe, raising the heel and applying an egg bar shoe remains the prescription for most farriers. There is some merit in this very vague description of how the horse should be shod, as some will respond favorably and continue doing their work for a while. However, the tough, non-responsive cases require more mechanics (less DDF tension). In order to design a more detailed, specific treatment plan, both vets and farriers should ponder these questions: Where is the pain? When is it painful? What part of the mechanical formula within the foot is no longer in harmony? Let's assume the pain occurs as the DDF tightens along the inflamed bursa and bone during peak load. Reasons for pain may include a cyst that has suddenly become painful, a cortical surface ulcer, collapsed cortex and extensive abrasions to the tendon as it courses over the rough surface. Fractures of the navicular bone are relatively rare compared to more commonly occurring lesions, but they do occur, as do congenital bi and tripartite navicular bones. Any one or all of the above can be associated with a routine run of the mill case. Horses experiencing pain associated with the navicular bone and support ligaments prefer not to drop their heel during peak load regardless of what lesion is causing the pain. Watch closely and you can see this compensated travel pattern. Some will actually jog sounder on a hard surface than they will on a very soft one, as the heel sinks into the ground on a soft surface, increasing DDF tension and therefore pain. Soft tissue parameters also need to be considered as they influence our management protocol. The farrier needs to know sole depth, PA, extent of the damage and whether rest is recommended or the horse is to continue light training. All of these factors influence how the horse should be shod so that everyone is happy. The DP and lateral low beam views will reveal how much sole depth we have to work with as well as heel mass and medial/lateral balance. The horse with 20mm of sole and a 3 to 5° PA has options not available to horses with 10mm of sole and a negative 5° PA. If the horse can be shut down (no training) for at least 6-10 weeks, the shoeing protocol will be totally different than the one we would elect for a horse that remains in training. The Rocker Rail Shoe The extent and chronicity of the lesion may require moderate to drastic DDF tension release to relieve the hot spot. I like to think of it as simply removing the idle pulley effect of the navicular bone, which has a primary function of reducing stress to the tendon and articular surface of the digits. This can be done with a self-adjusting PA rocker rail shoe that raises PA several degrees. This shoe has potential to drastically reduce friction from the tendon as it glides over the bone. How much raise is needed is relative to the existing PA, TSA and level of pain associated with the lesion or combination of lesions. The goal is to enhance the healing environment by reducing the overall friction reducing function of the navicular bone. This certainly does not cure the problem as the lesion remains and may become increasingly worse, but it can remove a large majority of the pain by drastically reducing the tendon force causing the hot spot. The inflamed tissue can heal as long as it is not being continually traumatized. The horse with very small navicular changes that is off and on lame and seldom shows more than grade 2 lameness on a tight circle may require a much smaller PA increase and can often go in a full rocker shoe that only raises the PA 3-5°. When that is all that is needed there is no reason to go for the overkill mechanics. You may need that level of mechanics later if the lesion is progressive. The horse can often go back into competitive training following a few weeks of healing as long as the mechanics of the shoe maintain a happy balance between healing and preventing further damage to sensitive tissue. While there are rare cases with large lesions that show no evidence of pain, most feet with large, distinct lesions will routinely be quite lame. As a rule I put these cases in a rocker rail shoe that allows the horse to establish a 15-18° PA. Turnout and slow trail riding is indicated as soon as the horse is comfortable. Often the pain response is minimal within a few days, even with horses that have been reported lame for many months to years. Daily slow exercise appears to be beneficial as the soft tissue is healing. The high scale case that becomes quite sound with 4-6 weeks of rest can be reset and begin a slow exercise program after the second reset. Many of these cases will remain quite sound in the rocker rail and remain in it when they go back into full training. From barrel racers to pleasure or halter horses, the mechanics of the shoe have not been a problem. Often owners and trainers want to know when the horse can go back into a flat shoe. Stop to think about this. As long as the lesion is there, putting the navicular bone back into a high tension mode will soon start the entire process over once again. ![]() This horse has osseous changes associated with the extensor process and distal PII, as well as navicular lesions. The rocker shoe satisfied the mechanical demands for both problems, relieving the tension of the DDF across the navicular bone and reducing the pinch effect of the lesion at the coronary band, as the shoe prevents overextension. Note the parallel line between the wings of PIII and the heel branch of the shoe. The foot side of the heel branches has been forged to reduce pressure on the tender heel buttress. Shoe Application Care is due when trimming and applying the shoe.
![]() Note center of articulation and the path that PIII travels, all due to the pull from the DDF. |




















