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  Home arrow Library arrow Strasser Articles arrow Navicular Disease – What Now? Monday, 06 February 2012    


Navicular Disease – What Now?
NAVICULAR DISEASE - WHAT NOW?
Dr. vet. med. H. Strasser has extensively studied the causes and treatments of navicular disease, although the results of these studies are not yet recognized by professional organizations. To date, more than 100 horses diagnosed with podotrochlosis (navicular syndrome) have been cured by Dr. Strasser in Germany.
First, the so-called "navicular disease" is NOT hereditary.
RATHER, THE CAUSE OF THIS CONDITION LIES IN A DEFORMATION OF THE HOOF.
Some of the causes for this deformation are a lack of exercise in the first few years of life, and shoeing. The deformation caused by shoeing creates pressure and crushing of the horn in the region of the navicular bone (ligament, sheaths, bone and joint), resulting in inflammation. Pressure on the navicular region can also result from excessively long bars and heels, leading to a painful inflammation of the corium adjacent to the navicular bone, and lameness.
Shoeing with raised heels or wedge pads to increase the angle of the hoof and relieve pressure in the heel area may lead to TEMPORARY improvement. HEALING, however, cannot be expected with orthopedic shoeing.
The CAUSE of the problem (the pressure) must be removed, and the UNSHOD hoof must gradually be brought into a physiologically correct form. If, at the same time, the horse's living conditions are good (freedom of movement 24 hours/day), the inflammation will abate within a few weeks, and the problem will disappear.

With friendly permition by DVM H. Strasser
Copyright 2005 Dr. vet. med. H. Strasser
Ed & Trans. Sabine Kells




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