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Usual disclaimers. See your veterinarian for diagnosis and treatment of any pathology. This post is to be considered information only and is not specific to any individual or type. Navicular Syndrome: Shoeing Methods Tom Stovall AFA Journeyman Farrier Navicular Syndrome: lameness in the rear third of a front foot which will block out with a posterior digital nerve block, usually both fronts involved, although sometimes not evident until one is blocked. All methods of shoeing for NS are palliative in nature. A farrier can't cure or correct anything, he can only relieve the symptoms to some degree. One hears the term "corrective shoeing" used in the treatment of NS horses however, "corrective" is a misnomer: no method of shoeing will correct the condition. Shoeing for NS must meet several criteria if it is to be successful: it must decrease pressure on the navicular bone from the deep flexor tendon, it must enhance breakover, and it must protect the rear third of the foot from environmental pressure. The primary method of shoeing the NS horse is to stand them up and turn them over. This means that the farrier will do whatever he can to increase the angulation. Increased angulation can be accomplished by several methods: cutting the toe, raising the heels, and setting the shoe under. Since the farrier is unable to grow hoof, raising the heels is accomplished through the usage of wedge pad(s) and various types of non-traction calks; e.g., roll calks, wedge calks, etc. Why increased angulation? Because this relieves the pressure exerted upon the navicular bone by the deep flexor tendon which uses the navicular bone as a fulcrum before it inserts into P3 (os pedis). Increased angulation relieves pressure from the DFT, but how is turnover enhanced? Several methods. First, through choice of configuration of shoe materials; i.e., the use of half-rounds, aluminum (which becomes a de-facto half-round with wear) and hot-rasping the ground surface of the toe of a conventional shoe. Secondly, and most important from the standpoint of enhanced turnover, the shoe must be set under so that an imaginary line from the front of the fetlock, bisecting the toe, to the ground, is as short as possible.
/ / / / / / / | / | /________________| |________________| ===================== ================== normal set under
By setting the shoe under, turnover is enhanced, and pressure on the DFT is reduced as a direct result. The obvious limiting factor to setting the shoe under is the white line; however, the shoe can be set under to the posterior edge of the white line if necessary. Note that the toe is "chopped off" rather than "feathered" to the coronary band in an effort to make the foot look "pretty". Excessive rasping, aka, "feathering the toe", destroys the structural integrity of the hoof. The easiest method of protecting the rear third of the foot is the use of a bar shoe. Underslung, low-heeled horses respond best to conventional (track-style) egg bars, probably because the increased support relieves pressure exerted by the DFT. Upright horses respond better to the more circular style of egg bars or straight bars. All styles may be configured with a "frog cradle" which protects the frog from environmental pressure; however, it's more efficient to use a wedge pad or bar wedge pad to accomplish the same result. We've all heard the old wive's tale: "A horse can't run in bar shoes". Horsefeathers! A horse that *needs* bar shoes, can't run without them. The aforementioned methods of farriery may be used individually or in combination. A horse with minor symptoms might be shod with half-rounds slightly set under; a horse with serious problems, with aluminum egg bars set under as much as possible and three degree bar wedge pads. Navicular problems range in severity from a slight bruise to the navicular bursa to a fractured navicular bone. They are all treated in much the same manner: palliative farriery in conjunction with the veterinary prescription of vasodilators when applicable. Due to farrier/veterinary cooperation resulting in increased knowledge relative to the diagnosis and treatment of this syndrome, horses which would have been euthanized 20 years ago are now dying of old age after leading full, active lives. Sometimes, all methods of palliation fail and a poster digital neurectomy becomes the only viable alternative to euthanasia. One of the methods of accomplishing a posterior digital neurectomy is the application of extreme cold to the nerve tissue, hence the term: "freezing". The usual method is to sever the medial and lateral posterior digital nerves. The lay term for this procedure is "nerved". The need for a neurectomy is considered to be established when all other means of shoeing and/or pain relief are exhausted.