R Whiteman
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- May 26, 2005
- Messages
- 256
- Reaction score
- 0
We just returned from the vet with our little mare Red. For the second time in 5 months, she has required IV Calcium. I have had horses for many years and have read about a condition called Thumps, a metabolic condition, usually seen in horses whose electrolytes are out of whack due to hard work. It is life threatening. It presents like a bad case of hiccups timed with the beat of an overworking heart. Without the calcium, the horse goes down and dies. Now I've seen it twice and I'm confused as to why. I thought some one of you all may have seen it in minis and can give us some idea as to why and what to do. Even my vet has only seen one clinical case...ours.
So here are the details; Red is a 31 inch mini mare, 12 years old. Retired from the show ring, bred twice. First foal born at 308 days, dead due to a hind foot forward which took several hours (yes, you read that correctly)
to resolve. Mare leaped to her feet after delivery and went right to grazing. Left off for a year to heal and checked by a vet before breeding again and foaled a colt who is now three years old. We quit breeding to let the market "heal" so mares have been turned out. They're presently very fat, so are wearing grazing muzzles during turnout. In March of this year, I found Red in the field shivering. Checked her temp; it was 105 so I called the vet, made an appointment for later in the day. Put a blanket on her and kept watch throughout the day. About noon she went down in a far corner of the field. I was unable to get her up. With the help of the neighbors, we loaded her into the bucket of our tractor and took her to the trailer, and then to the vet. I truly was not sure I would find her alive when I got there. When I opened the back door of the trailer, she staggered out and nibbled at the grass in the waiting area. Blood work showed no calcium, low white blood cells, low magnesium. She was given IV calcium...slowly and the "thumping" going on in her flanks resolved itself. She was then kept overnight and treated for colic and infection...by then she had no fever showing on the thermometer, but they were going by the blood work results. She came home the next day and was fine from that point on until today. At chores tonight, Red was down; She got up when I went out to check on her, but she was thumping again. Off to the vets for more Calcium. 20 minutes of drip and the thumps, high heart rate and 103 degree temp were gone. There was a stage when all of her large muscles started quivering, but that also resolved itself quickly. She's back to normal and standing in her stall tonight. We'll check her a couple of times, but I don't expect to see anything unusual till the next time.
Anyone seen anything like this? What can we do to keep it from happening again? Why is it happening to her and not to any of our other mares that share her pasture and her "figure type"? A side note: Her dam was the victim of early onset Cushings and was put down at 17 because of the repeated founders that could not be resolved. Could it be related? Anybody???
Dorothy
So here are the details; Red is a 31 inch mini mare, 12 years old. Retired from the show ring, bred twice. First foal born at 308 days, dead due to a hind foot forward which took several hours (yes, you read that correctly)

Anyone seen anything like this? What can we do to keep it from happening again? Why is it happening to her and not to any of our other mares that share her pasture and her "figure type"? A side note: Her dam was the victim of early onset Cushings and was put down at 17 because of the repeated founders that could not be resolved. Could it be related? Anybody???

Dorothy
Last edited by a moderator: