Warrenton Horse Works

Thursday, April 26, 2012


Spring Health

With the spring season hitting us in full bloom it is time to really start thinking about the health of your horse. Spring brings out the best in pastures but also brings out flying insects and flies, and the ugly word Mosquitoes. Getting your horses their spring shots is one of the most important issues a horse owner can tackle during this time of year. Every region is going to differ in the shots needed for this time of year but most veterinarians are going to recommend a coggins, west nile, rabies and either a four way or five way vaccine. Most four and five ways are going to include tetanus, EEE (Eastern Equine Encephalomyelitis), WEE (Western Equine Encephalomyelitis), and influenza. Along with these recommended vaccines horse owners also need to pay special attention to internal and external parasites. With livestock animals and horses becoming immune to the wormers we have available today, we need to make sure we are worming correctly. Due to the unseasonably warm winter and spring we are having parasites are going to be out in full forces and we want to make sure our horses are protected. If you need more information on spring vaccines or help with worming issues please contact your local Extension Office. Also make sure you have a client, patient relationship with your local large animal veterinarian. Contact Dr. Anna Russau - (540) 788-4044.

Tuesday, April 24, 2012


Preventing Ticks

Discover tips to rid your horse of those trying ticks.


By Sue Weaver - Horse Channel


Itchy ticks and tick lesions cause pastured horses to ferociously rub trees, fences and shelter walls, abrading throats, necks and hindquarters and destroying their manes and tails. Severe infestations produce anemia, loss of appetite and depression. Ticks can infect any horse—or horse owner—with Lyme disease, ehrlichiosis, Rocky Mountain spotted fever and tick-bite paralysis. Standard insect solutions rarely phase these rugged pests.

How to prevent?
  • Treat horses with tick-repellent products made specifically for horses found at your local pet store, tack and supply retailer, or farm and feed store.
  • If you prefer to hand-pick ticks, wear gloves. To remove a tick, grasp it as close to its host's skin as possible using fingers or forceps. Don't squeeze. Apply slow, steady, upward pressure until the tick comes away intact. Drop detached ticks into a jar of soapy water, then dispose of tick-laden liquid by burying it or flushing it down the toilet.
  • Keep a flock of Guinea fowl or free-range chickens. Feathered barnyard marauders consider ticks the pinnacle of haute cuisine--and you can dine on their eggs!

Wednesday, April 18, 2012


Indicators of Health or Illness in Horses

By Kentucky Equine Research Staff · April 17, 2012

Your horse doesn’t really seem sick, maybe just a little dull or not as active as usual. Is there something wrong with him? A veterinarian can determine a horse’s health status, but owners can check general indicators of health to help in deciding whether to call a veterinarian for an examination.

Body Temperature
To take the temperature of the horse you need a thermometer, which you can purchase from your veterinarian, a pharmacy, or a horse equipment shop. Thermometers are available in several types, but the digital ones are easiest to use. Grease the bulb end of the thermometer with petroleum jelly or cooking oil. Stand close to the horse and to the side. Lift the horse’s tail and gently insert the thermometer into the rectum. Push the thermometer against the rectal wall. Do not let go of the thermometer. Digital thermometers will beep when they are ready to be removed. The normal temperature range for a horse is between 37°C and 38°C (99° to 101° F). This can vary a degree or two according to climate and air temperature. Foals and small ponies are at the higher end of the normal scale, while older and larger horses are at the lower end. A horse with an abnormally low or high temperature needs the immediate attention of a vet.
Heart Rate
It’s important to know the average resting heart rate for your particular horse. Heart rate can be measured with a stethoscope (purchased from veterinarian, pharmacy, or tack shop) or by hand. To listen to the heart with a stethoscope, stand on the near side of the horse near the girth. Approximately one hand span up from the base of the chest (sternum), push the stethoscope in behind the muscle above the elbow (the brachial triceps) and press it against the ribs. Often the act of putting the stethoscope on the skin excites the horse, which increases the heart rate, so you may have to wait until the horse settles. Count the beats for one minute. If the horse will not stand still for one minute, count the beats for 15 seconds and multiply the result by four. You will hear two heart sounds that correspond to the heart muscle contracting (systole) and then relaxing (diastole). An approximation of the sounds that you hear are ‘lubb’ (systole) and ‘dupp’ (diastole), although they may be indistinguishable at high heart rates.
The normal heart rate for a horse ranges from 30 to 40 beats per minute (bpm), but this varies quite a bit, especially if the horse is eating, excited, feverish, anemic, hot, exercising, and so on. Young horses generally have a higher heart rate than older horses. Rates of foals at birth are 80 to 120 bpm, older foals are 60 to 80 bpm, and yearlings are about 40 to 60 bpm. In adult horses, the rate will become lower as the horse becomes fitter; for example, a very fit endurance horse can have a resting heart rate of 27 bpm. A horse that is fit will also return to its resting heart rate sooner after exercise than an unfit horse. To measure the heart rate by hand, use an arterial pressure point. These are found on the inside of the lower jaw, the inside of the forearm just in front of the elbow, or on the pastern above the heels.
Respiration Rate
Respiration is the alternating inhalation and exhalation of air. The normal respiration rate for a horse is 8 to 20 breaths per minute. The rate of respiration is measured by counting flank movements either by sight or by placing a hand on the ribcage. Normally you can see a horse breathe in, but not out. If the horse is making an obvious effort to breathe out, it may have a respiratory problem. The respiration rate should never be higher than the heart rate. Younger and smaller horses breathe more often than older and larger horses. Pregnant females also have a higher rate. The respiration rate is increased by exertion, fever, pneumonia, changes in the acidity of the blood (acidosis or alkalosis), anemia, and infectious diseases. Synchronous diaphragmatic flutter (thumps) occurs when the diaphragm contracts in unison with the heart rate and is caused by electrolyte disturbances, usually due to exercise.
Hydration Status
If the horse loses more fluid from its body than is absorbed, it becomes dehydrated, which leads to a reduction in the circulating blood and relatively dry tissues. Dehydration is caused by decreasedwater intake and/or too much water lost through sweating, diarrhea, or urination. Signs of dehydration are a weak pulse, sunken eyes, and dry, darkened gums.
A check for dehydration is the skin-tenting test in which a fold of skin on the horse’s
neck is grasped and pulled up slightly. When the skin is released, it should return to normal in a second or two. It should not stay up like a tent; if it does, this is a sign of significant dehydration. Veterinary attention should be sought quickly if the horse is not drinking.
Mucous Membrane Color and Capillary Refill Time
If the horse is healthy, its mucous membranes will be pink and the capillaries will fill quickly with blood. To determine the mucous membrane color, look at the horse’s gums, which are naturally a shade paler than a human’s. Too pale indicates anemia or shock, yellow shows jaundice, blue indicates a lack of oxygen, and darker red means dehydration and serious metabolic disease. To check the capillary refill time, press against the gum with a fingertip and release. The color should return within two seconds; any longer may indicate shock or dehydration.
Gut Sounds and Appetite
Gut sounds should always be audible and if not present may indicate colic. Place your ear or a stethoscope against the barrel behind the last rib. Listen on both sides. If there are no sounds, call a veterinarian.
Horses vary in their normal appetite; some are naturally very greedy and others are very finicky. It is important that you know what is normal for your horse. A change may mean that he is ill.
Body Condition
You should regularly assess your horse’s body condition. Various scoring systems allow owners to find their horses’ scores on a body condition chart. If your horse is too fat or too thin, take steps to change feed management to bring him into a score near the middle of the chart.
Coat
The coat of a healthy horse lies close to the body and shines. Some colors (bay and black) usually shine more than others (grey and roan). If the coat is standing up, it usually means that the horse is cold, but it can indicate illness. The coat hair stands up because the horse is attempting to trap air and warm itself. In the short term, the condition of a horse’s coat is not affected by illness, but a chronically unwell horse has a dull, rough, or dry coat. Diet can also affect the condition of the coat.
Nasal Discharge
It is quite normal for a horse to have a trickle of liquid in the nostrils, but it should be clear and not sticky. Yellow or green sticky mucus indicates illness.
Behavior
The behavior of individual horses varies enormously, so again it is important that you know what is normal for your horse. A healthy horse should be alert, interested in what is going on around it, sociable with other horses, and willing to move forward when ridden. A healthy horse will, when turned out with other horses, occasionally have a run around, lie down to sleep in the sun, and play with other horses.
When a horse is ill it will not display its normal behavior. It may stand with its head down or lie down more than normal or not at all. The sick horse looks “tucked up” (the flanks are sucked in). The horse will either not be alert or may be excessively anxious. It may keep looking at its flanks and/or paw the ground (signs of abdominal pain). Other behavioral signs of illness include excessive chewing on objects or sudden aggressive behavior. Basically, any changes in normal behavior should be investigated. Checking the temperature, pulse, and respiration is the minimum examination if you suspect that your horse is ill. If you are concerned about anything, you should call your veterinarian.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012


Supplement Promotes Gastrointestinal Healing in Horses


Newsdate: 
Tue, 10 Apr 2012 - 06:42 AM
Location: 
BELLEVILLE, Ontario, Canada

A new botanical based product is now available in the United States that will help promote equine gastrointestinal self-healing by supporting a horse’s own natural defenses. Equine Gastrafate® is a gastrointestinal mucosal protectant that can be used in the treatment of Equine Gastric Ulcer Syndrome. Studies have shown that as many as 80% of all performance horses suffer from ulcers

“Acid-reducing treatments for horses are not a long-term solution, and drug therapies can be expensive. Rapid recurrence of ulcers is common if those therapies are stopped,” says Andrew Grant, President of Bioniche Animal Health (global). “Equine Gastrafate® is a low-cost alternative to drugs that are currently available and it provides natural, direct, on-contact support to the mucosal lining, allowing it to heal itself.”
A study was conducted over a three-and-a-half year period with 32 equine veterinarians in an open-label field study involving 209 horses. Clinical results have shown that 85% of horses with ulcer-associated colic and 91% of horses with diarrhea-associated colic showed improvement within four days when treated with Equine Gastrafate®.
Equine Gastrafate® is available in 500 mL bottles from veterinarians. The liquid can be administered directly or via a horse’s feed. One bottle provides a one-month supply of the supplement for an average –sized 1,000 pound horse.
Bioniche Animal Health was formed in 1979 in Canada as a privately owned company to develop vaccines and other pharmaceutical-based products for the management of animal diseases. Now a business unit of Bioniche Life Sciences Inc., a publicly listed  biopharmaceutical company (TSX: BNC and ASX: BNC), Bioniche Animal Health has marketing subsidiaries in Australia, Canada, Europe, and the United States. Visit www.bionicheanimalhealth.com.

Monday, April 2, 2012


Corn Oil in Equine Diets


Corn oil has been a staple in the diets of many horses for years, but has this much-loved additive fallen out of favor? Supplementing a horse's diet with corn oil has its advantages and disadvantages, but scientific headway might be making this pour-on less appealing to horse owners.
Because it is completely fat, corn oil was originally added to diets to increase the energy density without increasing bulk. Studies have shown that that regular supplementation of fat as an energy source has a glycogen-sparing effect and has been found to be beneficial in long-distance exercise. With regard to intense exercise, however, corn oil resulted in increased lactic acid production and higher heart rates in comparison to horses supplemented with rice bran (approximately 20% fat). 
The use of corn oil as an energy source is particularly valuable in the hot months of the year because its digestion produces less heat than any other energy constituent in a horse's diet.  
Corn oil cannot be used as the only energy source. It should never be fed at more than 15% of the total diet, but 1 to 16 ounces per day is safe.  Too much oil will decrease feed consumption and may cause loose manure. If large amounts of oil are fed too quickly, horses may experience bloating and excessive gas production, so oil should be introduced slowly, adding a little more each day.
Digestibility of corn oil is high, which means that the horse, once its gastrointestinal tract adapts to the oil, is able to utilize almost all of the oil with no waste. Corn oil remains the most palatable oil in taste tests, with no other oil or oil combination ever topping it. Because it is a liquid, it adds no bulk and is therefore helpful for horses that have to consume large amounts of feed.  Corn oil attracts loose particles and keeps down the dust in a feed, making it an excellent choice for horses with respiratory problems or for those that consume powdered supplements.
Horses fed corn oil have improved coat quality and shine, and an improvement in the flexibility of thehooves has been noted. Further, studies on corn oil supplementation have shown its effect on decreasing reactivity, which is why it has been touted as “calm energy.”
Perhaps the biggest failing of corn oil and the reason for its decline in popularity, is the high omega-6 and low omega-3 content, which has been found to promote inflammatory processes in the body. When added to a diet composed entirely of hay and grain, corn oil can grossly imbalance the omega-6 to omega-3 ratio, which makes tissues vulnerable to inflammation.
Many of the benefits of using corn oil are similar for other vegetable oils like canola or soybean oil, but the other oils have better omega-6 to omega-3 ratios. In the end, will the health benefits of balancing omegas overcome the definite taste preference in the quest for the ideal oil for horses?