samwv
New User
My horse has a bilateral lameness (2/10) as has some slight navicular changes- we are addressing the shoeing to aid with this but does anyone have any experience using any supplements that at BE friendly to help?
TIA
TIA
The navicular changes are not a diagnosis. The changes to the bone are only very rarely the cause of lameness. The important thing is whether your horse has a toe first or a 'one side of the foot first' landing. Those things cause soft tissue injury and/or joint inflammation which is the cause of the lameness. And if they aren't corrected, the lameness can't be cured.
Look at rockleyfarm.blogspot.com
PS is anyone else sick to the back teeth of vets continuing to give a diagnosis of lameness due to deterioration of the navicular bone? It's been known for at least twenty years now that it isn't the case unless it's falling apart.
The navicular changes are not a diagnosis. The changes to the bone are only very rarely the cause of lameness. The important thing is whether your horse has a toe first or a 'one side of the foot first' landing. Those things cause soft tissue injury and/or joint inflammation which is the cause of the lameness. And if they aren't corrected, the lameness can't be cured.
Look at rockleyfarm.blogspot.com
PS is anyone else sick to the back teeth of vets continuing to give a diagnosis of lameness due to deterioration of the navicular bone? It's been known for at least twenty years now that it isn't the case unless it's falling apart.
Hopefully anyone who does get a navicular diagnosis will google and find out more then go back and question the vets, in time it should make a difference.
PS is anyone else sick to the back teeth of vets continuing to give a diagnosis of lameness due to deterioration of the navicular bone? It's been known for at least twenty years now that it isn't the case unless it's falling apart.