Overriding Spinous Process, otherwise known as Kissing Spine can cause back pain and poor performance, especially when two or more vertebrae touch or overlap. Assistant Professor Dr. Nathalie Cote in the department of Large Animal Surgery at Ontario Veterinary College recently presented a new less invasive surgical approach to treat this issue that is showing great preliminary results.

While there is very little movement in the lumbar area of a horse’s spine, the thoracic area just in front of it has a slightly wider range. Thoracic vertebrae allow side-to-side flexion, a little rotation and flexion and extension which allow the back to move up and down. Impingement most frequently occurs under the saddle area between thoracic vertebrae T13 to T18 with T14 to 16 (right where the rider sits) being the most common.

A horse skeleton.Not all riding horses with kissing spine will present with clinical signs. In fact, it is not uncommon to find Kissing Spine post-mortem in riding horses that have not shown obvious signs of pain. Kissing Spine has also been found in post-mortems of extinct and undomesticated horses which leads to conclusions that in some cases conformation plays a role.

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