Equine Grace Equistrian Centre ta Wildman Stables

Equine Grace Equistrian Centre ta Wildman Stables Horse life

14/04/2026

The Vagus Nerve in Horses

Where it runs, what it does, its relationship to fascia, and how to influence it through bodywork and movement

What the Vagus Nerve Is

The Vagus nerve is the primary nerve of the parasympathetic system—the part of the nervous system responsible for rest, recovery, digestion, and regulation.

More than just a motor nerve, roughly 80% of its fibers are sensory, meaning it is constantly carrying information from the body back to the brain. This makes it highly dependent on the state of the tissues it passes through and innervates.

Where It Runs in the Horse

The vagus nerve originates in the brainstem and travels:
• Through the poll and upper cervical region
• Down the neck within the carotid sheath
• Through the thoracic inlet
• Into the thorax (heart and lungs)
• Into the abdomen (digestive organs)

This pathway places it in close relationship with:
• The base of the neck
• The thoracic sling
• The ribcage and sternum
• The diaphragm
• The visceral space

These are all regions where posture, tension, and fascial restriction can influence its function.

What It Does

The vagus nerve regulates core physiological and behavioral functions:
• Heart rate and variability
• Breathing rhythm and depth
• Digestive motility and efficiency
• Inflammatory response
• Ability to down-regulate after stress

In practical terms, it reflects the horse’s ability to shift out of a protective, sympathetic state into a more regulated, adaptive one.

The Fascia Relationship

The vagus nerve exists within the body and is strongly influenced by Fascia.

1. Mechanical Environment

Fascial tension in the neck, thoracic inlet, and ribcage can alter the pressure and mobility of the tissues surrounding vagal pathways.

2. Visceral Fascia

The organs innervated by the vagus are suspended and organized by fascial layers. These layers must be able to glide and deform for normal function.

3. Sensory Input

Fascia is highly innervated and constantly feeding information to the nervous system. Poor tissue quality increases “noise” and can bias the system toward protection.

4. Fluid and Hydration

Healthy fascia supports fluid movement and adaptability. Stiff or dehydrated tissue alters the internal environment the nervous system is reading.

How It Shows Up in the Horse

A horse with better vagal tone tends to show:
• A softer, more mobile neck, jaw and chest
• More regular breathing patterns
• Improved digestion
• Greater ability to settle after stress
• Willingness to engage without bracing or internalizing

A horse with reduced vagal influence may present as:
• Tight through the poll and base of neck
• Restricted ribcage movement
• Shallow or inconsistent breathing
• Digestive sensitivity
• Reactive or guarded behavior

How to Positively Influence It

You are not directly “stimulating” the vagus nerve. You are improving the conditions it depends on.

1. Restore Comfortable Range of Motion

Work the horse through pain-free, controlled movement:
• Lateral bending
• Gentle flexion and extension
• Ribcage mobilization

This improves sensory input and reduces protective guarding.

2. Improve Ribcage and Diaphragm Function

The vagus nerve has strong influence over heart and lungs, which are mechanically tied to the ribcage and diaphragm.
• Encourage rib mobility
• Address sternum and intercostal restrictions
• Support full, rhythmic breathing

3. Address Key Fascial Transitions

Focus on areas where mechanical tension concentrates:
• Poll and upper cervical region
• Base of the neck and thoracic inlet
• Sternum and ventral thorax
• Diaphragm attachments
• Thoracic sling and back muscle

The goal is to restore comfort, glide and adaptability.

4. Use Slow, Sustained Contact

Gentle, consistent input allows the nervous system to shift out of protection.
• Avoid fast, aggressive techniques
• Allow time for the tissue and system to respond
• Work with the horse, not “on” them

5. Include Jaw, Tongue, and Hyoid Work

These structures have strong neurological connections and often influence overall tone.
• Releasing tension here can affect the entire system
• Changes are often reflected in breathing and posture
• This is an extremely delicate and somewhat invasive area that must be addressed carefully and considerably.

6. Reduce Background Stressors

Pain, poor posture, poor nutrition or other environmental stressors and compensatory movement patterns continuously feed the nervous system.
• Improve posture and load distribution
• Reevaluate environmental factors
• Address chronic restrictions
• Support movement quality under saddle and in-hand

The Practical Takeaway

The vagus nerve reflects the internal state of the horse. It is shaped by:
• Tissue quality
• Movement variability
• Mechanical pressure and tension
• The clarity of sensory input
• Emotional balance

When fascia moves well, breath is unrestricted, and movement is organized, the nervous system receives a clearer, safer signal.

That is what improves regulation.

You improve the body the nerve lives in, and the nervous system follows.

https://koperequine.com/how-prosix-affects-posture-movement-and-stress-in-horses/

27/03/2026
08/03/2026
21/08/2025

Gelukwensing aan ons ruiters

Ons wil elke ruiter van harte gelukwens met julle plek in die Nasionale Kampioenskappe in Oktober. Dit is ’n ongelooflike prestasie om hierheen te kwalifiseer, en ons is trots op die harde werk, dissipline en deursettingsvermoë wat julle elke dag wys – in die saal en buite dit.

Mag hierdie kampioenskappe vir julle nie net ’n kompetisie wees nie, maar ook ’n ervaring vol trots, leer en vreugde. Onthou – elke tree wat julle en julle perde saam gee, is reeds ’n oorwinning.

Sterkte aan elkeen – ons staan almal agter julle

Larice du plooy en Merlin
Larice du plooy en Silvermoon
Rienke du plooy en Strawberry
Allegria Eksteen en Legend
Cate Meyer en Scooby
Donnay Pretorius en Snork
Megan van Gent en Lilly
Bella van Gent en Brakenjan
Amelia Pretorius en Bries

17/08/2025

Don't cook your horse's tendons
In the exercising horse, tendons heat up to 46°C because of the elastic stretching action which generates heat energy within the tendon bundles and central tendon core. After exercise under hot conditions, tendon temperatures can increase to 47°C as air cooling of the limbs is reduced, which in the long term is considered to damage the structure within the tendon core fibrils, increasing the risk of tendon strain and failure at full loading during exercise.

It is essential to remove any tendon protection wraps (e.g. polo bandages, tendon boots) immediately following fast or strenuous exercise to allow the tendons to radiate and remove the accumulated heat. Cool down the joints and tendons after exercise by icing the rear of the front limbs for 5-10 minutes after exercise to help lower internal core temperatures within tendons. Cold water hosing for 5-10 minutes will also remove accumulated heat after exercise.

17/08/2025
12/08/2025
10/08/2025
10/08/2025
09/08/2025

Address

Ermelo Outlying

Telephone

+27718779905

Website

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Equine Grace Equistrian Centre ta Wildman Stables posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Equine Grace Equistrian Centre ta Wildman Stables:

Share