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Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?

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CocoChex
Reg. Mar 2013
Posted 2014-03-21 10:17 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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Blocking the heel can pinpoint the lameness. Also x-rays don't always show navicular as there can be soft tissue damage. A horse that is navicular particularly in one hoof usually has a more contracted heel on that foot as well as sometimes suspensory or tendon soreness on that leg
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LuckyNGG'sGirl
Reg. Jun 2012
Posted 2014-03-21 11:13 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?


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CocoChex - 2014-03-21 10:17 PM

Blocking the heel can pinpoint the lameness. Also x-rays don't always show navicular as there can be soft tissue damage. A horse that is navicular particularly in one hoof usually has a more contracted heel on that foot as well as sometimes suspensory or tendon soreness on that leg

Agreed. My mare didn't show any bone changes on the X-ray but her soft tissue was damaged and her heels were sore - thus dubbed "navicular". Her one foot developed first and then later we came to find out it was both feet.



Edited by LuckyNGG'sGirl 2014-03-21 11:14 PM
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Jenbabe
Reg. Jul 2006
Posted 2014-03-22 9:23 AM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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hlynn - 2014-03-21 9:55 PM

Jenbabe - 2014-03-21 10:43 PM

The only reason I'd put wedges on one is after x-rays to see if the angles need changed. We've put a couple in wedges as we worked toward correcting their angles. I would be more concerned about the tender soles and wonder if the pain was related to that.

He's not due for a few more weeks and I'm not going to slap wedges on out of nowhere without some hard evidence. That's not how I am. With the other horse, we let him go until his next shoeing and by that time he wasn't even sore anymore.

He came up three legged lame last year from a bruise. I thought for sure he had an abscess, but nothing ever blew out. I just soaked it, packed it with poultice, then he was better overnight. Never took another bad step. Only thing I could think of was a bruise. I guess he's just a thin soled sensitive horse. He's fine in the pasture (we live in a very sandy area) and he's fine running. Just tip toes over rocks is all.

I wasn't implying that you would put shoes on without evidence. I was just sharing my opinion about wedges since some people are totally against them. I think that there is a time and place if they are necessary for the soundness of a horse.

My concern about the thin soles would be if you plan to continue hauling him. You might have to look into shoes and pads to keep his feet comfortable on those other types of ground. Otherwise you might be fighting sore feet more often, especially if this current pain is from the thin soles.
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rodeoveteran
Reg. Jan 2009
Posted 2014-03-22 2:39 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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I had a VERY well regarded lameness vet tell me that my horse most likely had navicular , AFTER he told me that the digital xrays were clean. and AFTER I had told him that the mare consistently dropped 8 degrees or more in one front foot in six weeks (we had already been resetting her every 3 weeks). He did allow that it "could " be a deep digital flexor injury, which with her history made more sense. he told me to put wedge shoes on her , which made no sense at all because she would STILL drop angle in that foot.

SO I took her back to my regular vet, we did shock wave and have had no issues since and that was maybe 6 years ago.

So No, navicular is NOT the only source of heel pain. Not to mention the abcess thing.
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Bankroll
Reg. Aug 2013
Posted 2014-03-22 2:57 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?


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CocoChex - 2014-03-21 10:17 PM

Blocking the heel can pinpoint the lameness. Also x-rays don't always show navicular as there can be soft tissue damage. A horse that is navicular particularly in one hoof usually has a more contracted heel on that foot as well as sometimes suspensory or tendon soreness on that leg

Thank you, if you want a true diagnosis, do an MRI.
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rodeoveteran
Reg. Jan 2009
Posted 2014-03-22 3:02 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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Bankroll - 2014-03-22 2:57 PM

CocoChex - 2014-03-21 10:17 PM

Blocking the heel can pinpoint the lameness. Also x-rays don't always show navicular as there can be soft tissue damage. A horse that is navicular particularly in one hoof usually has a more contracted heel on that foot as well as sometimes suspensory or tendon soreness on that leg

Thank you, if you want a true diagnosis, do an MRI.

That is all well and good to get a definitive diagnosis, but who has that kind of money to drop on a horse that is not showing any lameness??!!
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Bankroll
Reg. Aug 2013
Posted 2014-03-22 3:19 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?


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rodeoveteran - 2014-03-22 3:02 PM

Bankroll - 2014-03-22 2:57 PM

CocoChex - 2014-03-21 10:17 PM

Blocking the heel can pinpoint the lameness. Also x-rays don't always show navicular as there can be soft tissue damage. A horse that is navicular particularly in one hoof usually has a more contracted heel on that foot as well as sometimes suspensory or tendon soreness on that leg

Thank you, if you want a true diagnosis, do an MRI.

That is all well and good to get a definitive diagnosis, but who has that kind of money to drop on a horse that is not showing any lameness??!!

When he show's pain to hoof tests and is sore on rocks and hard ground, I would consider the horse to be lame. That's just me.
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r_beau
Reg. Apr 2010
Posted 2014-03-22 5:34 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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 My horse was "off" in his trot last year. Better some days; worse other days. Took him to my lameness vet and he had heel pain in both front feet, slight worse in the left. Took x-rays and there really weren't any navicular changes but his joint spaces looked a little crooked. Put 2 degree wedges on his, have him a week off with bute, and he was honestly cured. Pulled his shoes for winter and now that I'm legging him back up, he doesn't feel quite 100%. Shoes are going back on next weekend. Going to try a plain shoe with a pad and see how he responds to that. I want to avoid long-term wedges if I can, but if it works... Well, then it works. 
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cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2014-03-22 5:43 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?


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r_beau - 2014-03-22 5:34 PM

 My horse was "off" in his trot last year. Better some days; worse other days. Took him to my lameness vet and he had heel pain in both front feet, slight worse in the left. Took x-rays and there really weren't any navicular changes but his joint spaces looked a little crooked. Put 2 degree wedges on his, have him a week off with bute, and he was honestly cured. Pulled his shoes for winter and now that I'm legging him back up, he doesn't feel quite 100%. Shoes are going back on next weekend. Going to try a plain shoe with a pad and see how he responds to that. I want to avoid long-term wedges if I can, but if it works... Well, then it works. 

Pads can be worse for horses then wedges, as wedges you can gradually reduce with more heel growth.

Pads many things can occur under the pad without your knowledge such as seedy toe, white line disease, and thrush, these things like to grow in warm dark moist places, the pad gives this.

6 weeks is a long time to go without treatment, and most horses won't be lame till there is a lot of damage done to the foot.

I would also want an ultrasound to ensure there is no soft tissue damage causing the horse to be off, but my vet blocks, and depending on the block will X-ray, ultrasound, or both before a diagnosis and treatment plan is developed

Not to quote R Beau again, but antibiotic powder does not erradicate thrush, or seedy toe, or white line disease, as all three are caused by a fungus.

As with anything pertaining to your horse make sure you know what is going in and why it is going in

Edited by cheryl makofka 2014-03-22 7:55 PM
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r_beau
Reg. Apr 2010
Posted 2014-03-22 5:56 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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cheryl makofka - 2014-03-22 5:43 PM
r_beau - 2014-03-22 5:34 PM  My horse was "off" in his trot last year. Better some days; worse other days. Took him to my lameness vet and he had heel pain in both front feet, slight worse in the left. Took x-rays and there really weren't any navicular changes but his joint spaces looked a little crooked. Put 2 degree wedges on his, have him a week off with bute, and he was honestly cured. Pulled his shoes for winter and now that I'm legging him back up, he doesn't feel quite 100%. Shoes are going back on next weekend. Going to try a plain shoe with a pad and see how he responds to that. I want to avoid long-term wedges if I can, but if it works... Well, then it works. 
Pads can be worse for horses then wedges, as wedges you can gradually reduce with more heel growth. Pads many things can occur under the pad without your knowledge such as seedy toe, white line disease, and thrush, these things like to grow in warm dark moist places, the pad gives this. 6 weeks is a long time to go without treatment, and most horses won't be lame till there is a lot of damage done to the foot. I would also want an ultrasound to ensure there is no soft tissue damage causing the horse to be off, but my vet blocks, and depending on the block will X-ray, ultrasound, or both before a diagnosis and treatment plan is developed

 This is not my thread so I don't want to hijack it by going into too much detail. 

My horse has good heels. He doesn't need anymore growth. I personally feel that pads give a bit of extra protection. He gets his shoes reset every 5 weeks on the nose, and my farrier packs with anti- biotic powder (don't know the official name). He had pads with his wedges and I did not have a problem with them, although of course that doesn't mean it can't happen. 
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daisycake123
Reg. Dec 2006
Posted 2014-03-22 7:17 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?


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I had a nice mare who grew no heel on one front foot and too much heal on the other, what worked the best was to use nb shoes and uprite foot we would slide the shoe a little forward and the other one we would slide it back a little bit and use a pour in pad to help the foot all we could and i would file themtoe on that foot everymcouple of weeks to drive themtoe,back. This mare turned so,hard she would move her shoes even with eight nails front and back shoes one tough cookie.
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hlynn
Reg. Dec 2011
Posted 2014-03-22 8:27 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?


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Got him out today. Took my thumbs and squeezed his heels and frog with all my might and he didn't move. Even used the hoof pick and put some pressure on the area and he was fine. Maybe he just didn't take too kindly to someone squeezing the snot out of his foot. Lol. He rode fine. Nothing was really off. His usual turd self.

I really think it was a freak thing. He's not lame at all. So I'm really not worried about it. If he goes lame, then I'll go in depth to figure out why. But I think we're alright for now.

Thanks for all the suggestions and stories.
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cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2014-03-22 11:31 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?


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hlynn - 2014-03-22 8:27 PM

Got him out today. Took my thumbs and squeezed his heels and frog with all my might and he didn't move. Even used the hoof pick and put some pressure on the area and he was fine. Maybe he just didn't take too kindly to someone squeezing the snot out of his foot. Lol. He rode fine. Nothing was really off. His usual turd self.

I really think it was a freak thing. He's not lame at all. So I'm really not worried about it. If he goes lame, then I'll go in depth to figure out why. But I think we're alright for now.

Thanks for all the suggestions and stories.

Fingers don't work, you actually need hoof testers. For a hot nail you can get away with using pliers, but to test for localized pain in the foot you need the hoof testers.

It is your horse, what you do or don't do with your horse is your decision.

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kissmybarrelbutt
Reg. Feb 2012
Posted 2014-03-23 8:11 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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dinero7783 - 2014-03-21 3:13 PM

I wouldn't get even the least bit worried until I had a DVM DIAGNOSIS from a good equine vet. Just because a horse is a little sore in his front feet doesn't make him navicular. Anymore, that term is so overused, 90% of horses sore in their front feet aren't a true navicular horse.

^^^^^^^^^^ This
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halter_ego
Reg. Feb 2007
Posted 2014-03-23 11:44 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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My heel sore horse was diagnosed with DDF Tendonitis.
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Southtxponygirl
Reg. Nov 2006
Posted 2014-03-24 12:26 AM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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One of my gelding's had a sore heel for about a week was a back foot, I think he either was kicking at another horse and he hit the fence, are my other gelding run up behind him and froged him. A week with stall rest and soft ground he's back to feeling normal again. 
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bccanchaser16
Reg. Jan 2007
Posted 2014-03-24 2:46 AM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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 My "navicular" was actually a tear in the lateral suspensory of the navicular bone. No changes in the actual navicular bone. Wedges and Vetalog in the coffin bone did the trick.
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TurnLane
Reg. May 2007
Posted 2014-03-24 11:52 AM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?



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Pads are not always a bad thing if handled properly and applied properly- IMO.

Reata Equine Podiatry in Weatherford Tx is the Rood and Riddle foot specialists of the Southwest. They are very serious that a horse with foot lameness issues NEED PROTECTION- ie pad and softrides at ALL times when on anything less that soft ground. That means in your horse trailer-on rocks, on concrete, on hard dirt- protect protect protect to let the horse heal.

And I agree on the MRI- and also agree that it is not viable for most expecially in this early stage. But if you call your your horse a wuss or always tender footed, at the very least you need to start with Xrays and do your best to protect him. 
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quickdraw
Reg. Apr 2009
Posted 2014-03-24 12:36 PM
Subject: RE: Do sore heels ALWAYS mean navicular?


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I agree with Dinero. I want to add that sore heels can be caused by a lot of different things. If a horse has low heels (low angles) which are common in thoroughbreds, they are more likely to get sore heels because they are landing on their heels. If a shoer pares the sole too thin (very common) they will get tender footed. Some horses just won't grow a thick sole either.....genetic thing. If the farrier puts a shoe on that is TOO SMALL (also very common), as the hoof grows and the toe gets longer, the shoe will seem to "move forward" and leave the heel with no shoe underneath it. Then you have a double edged sword working against you because the heel is getting bruised by hitting the ground and is worsened because it is dropping off the back of the shoe. Over-reaching will also make them sore. So many things besides navicular. I have a horse with thin soles and I keep him shod with pour in pads and have no problems with it. Every time we reset him I personally look at his feet and check for thrush, etc.... and have not had a problem but I try to keep him on dry ground too. A GOOD vet would never tell you to shoe with wedges without taking good digital xrays and seeing the horse's angles to determine they need it. You should always shoe the natural foot. Changing angles with wedges changes the wear on the pastern and ankle joints and can cause them to wear through the cartilage and have bones rubbing bones.
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