targetsmom
Well-Known Member
I think I have seen everything mentioned on here... a foal choked this past year and the only sign was milk coming out his nose. No panic, nothing else, and at first I thought it was just a snotty nose. Till I tried to give him Banamine and THAT came out his nose.
Anyway on the colic issue, one thing I think I learned is that horses (or any non-verbal animal) have only limited ways of expressing pain. That is why it is so hard even for vets to distinguish between a gas colic, impaction colic or ulcers. As I mentioned earlier in this thread that Max had surgery for an impaction, but I neglected to mention that after 3 days of examination by a raft of vets in 2 states, the surgery was EXPLORATORY. I still think his main issue was ulcers (stomach AND intestine)... but they removed an impaction from his cecum.
So for Shelterwood, you might want to consider that the symptoms your horse is showing might be ulcers. Max's main ulcer symptoms have been parking out (as if to pee), pawing, lying down and rolling only until his feet are in the air, and just lacking "sparkle". Stool is normal but appetite can be poor, especially for grain, which can aggravate an ulcer. As I think chewing wood can. That sparkle thing is very subtle and I only noticed it when Max got the sparkle back.
Anyway on the colic issue, one thing I think I learned is that horses (or any non-verbal animal) have only limited ways of expressing pain. That is why it is so hard even for vets to distinguish between a gas colic, impaction colic or ulcers. As I mentioned earlier in this thread that Max had surgery for an impaction, but I neglected to mention that after 3 days of examination by a raft of vets in 2 states, the surgery was EXPLORATORY. I still think his main issue was ulcers (stomach AND intestine)... but they removed an impaction from his cecum.
So for Shelterwood, you might want to consider that the symptoms your horse is showing might be ulcers. Max's main ulcer symptoms have been parking out (as if to pee), pawing, lying down and rolling only until his feet are in the air, and just lacking "sparkle". Stool is normal but appetite can be poor, especially for grain, which can aggravate an ulcer. As I think chewing wood can. That sparkle thing is very subtle and I only noticed it when Max got the sparkle back.