T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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698.1 | | USADEC::GILL | | Tue Aug 30 1988 12:51 | 17 |
| The bad thing about diarrhea is its dehydration effects. This can
be more serious than the initial diarrhea. Changing the feed around
will oft times cause problems too, so don't make drastic changes
too quickly. I just had a thoroughbred have a good case of the
plops for about 2 weeks. Every day I took is temperature to make
sure that he did not spike a temp. I had the vet come to take blood
work to see if he was harboring a slight infection or inflamation
somewhere. Everything came back negative. In the meantime I cut
his feed from 12qrts to 8qrts and supplimented this with as much
good hay as he could eat (not alfalpha) and most important,
electrolytes in his feed twice daily to suppliment the loss from
his system because of the diarrhea. The vet also gave me Scourex
to put into his food to cement him together. As of today, the plops
are history.
good luck,
stephanie
|
698.2 | Kaopectate | BSS::LEECH | Pat Leech CX01/02 DTN 522-6044 | Tue Aug 30 1988 14:43 | 16 |
|
One of the things that I have done in the past is go out to the
Farm and Fleet and get Kaopectate in the gallon jug. You add water
to the jug to make a liquid from the powder and then give it by
mouth with an oral syringe. This helps to dry them up and control
the dehydration. It has a cherry flavor and the horses seem to
like it a lot. The amount you give depends on body weight. I would
check with the vet and see what he thinks about the diarrhea. Several
horses have had it at the old barn I was boarding at in Chicago
and it seems to be related to the drought and the quality of the
hay that has been available this year. I think the Kaopectate is
also available from most vets. I went to Farm and Fleet because
it was cheaper there.
Pat
|
698.3 | Seems to be going around | DELNI::L_MCCORMACK | | Tue Aug 30 1988 15:04 | 9 |
|
There seems to be a mild virus going around and this is the main
sympton. A friend's horse had it. Then it went through all six
horses at my place one at a time. I just let it run it's course
and all were fine.
|
698.4 | | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | | Tue Aug 30 1988 15:35 | 19 |
|
Another "help" is replenishing the "helpful" bacteria in the gut.
(Works for people, too)
You can do this by feeding for a few days:
1. Yogurt (mixed with honey in a syringe) -- that good ole'
lactobacillus
or
2. START-BAC by Farnum (which has lactobacillus)
or
3. PROBIOCIN which you get from your vet which has lactobacillus
(marketed by the Microbial-Genetics division of Pioneer Hi-bred
International. They are the ones which sold the Start-bac formula
to Farnum)
|
698.5 | When I read Pellets...I had to reply! | SEDJAR::NANCY | | Wed Aug 31 1988 17:48 | 24 |
|
Hi!
Your horse may have a problem because of the PELLETS. I had a mare
that I switched to pellets in the same manner (amount) that I would
for changing one sweet feed to another. What I didn't realise was
that you have to go much slower when changing to pellets. I tried
decreasing the feed (pellets) and increasing the hay..to no avail.
Finally I took her off of pellets . After 1-2 weeks her problem
went away. Then I started my feed change back to pellets, but in
increments that were 1/2 the previous amount.
I want you to know this is a common problem with pellets, and
it takes twice as long to make a feed change to pellets, if you
want to avoid mucky manure!
If the feed change is the problem....sometimes, feeding free-
range hay (as much as the horse wants, keep the hay rack full) can
speed things along...it should only take a few days to see improvement.
I wish you and your horse luck!
Nancy
P.S. Don't worry...horses can survive nicely on hay alone for a
few days.
|
698.6 | walkies | CHEFS::SEDGWICKH | plastic sheep in boots hate rain | Thu Sep 01 1988 12:31 | 14 |
| Have you tried worming your horse, Yes you probably have but it
was just a thought. My horse suffers with the squitts, we wormed
him and it became just a little more lumpy. When he does get the
runs I find that A little extra bran helps as it clears the system
out. He has this with nuts and molly chaff.
try it anyway.
Do you take your horse for walks as well. Considering that he is
retired and can't be ridden to much he will still need exercise
and taking your horse or pony for a walk can be great fun, and it
makes life more interesting for him. This will help towards his
squitts clearing up.
|
698.7 | CAROB? | WFOV12::NOLL | | Fri Sep 09 1988 14:37 | 8 |
| OBVIOUSLY KEEP A CLOSE ON ON HIM, BUT CAROB SOMETIMES HELPS.
MELT SOME DOWN IN WATER AND ADD TO BRAN FOR A BRAN MASH.
LET ME KNOW IF IT HELPS.
|
698.8 | alot in, alot out | SALEM::DOUGLAS | | Mon Sep 12 1988 10:47 | 12 |
| Thanks for all the replies:
Chucky is doing much better! His squitts have cleared. Being as
old as he is, I think the amount and type of food and fresh grass
was to rich for him.
He's on 4 flakes of hay a day now, 2 qts of low protein pellets,
a cup of bran, and Clovite for good measure. He's restricted from
sweet feed and grass and it's been working great!
I guess it came down to a poor feeding schedule on my part. It just
breaks my heart to hear him cry when his buddy is in the field and
he can't go! But, I have to be strong!
|
698.9 | once again! | SALEM::DOUGLAS | | Wed Sep 14 1988 12:05 | 16 |
| The squitts are back! Is it possible that the *alfalfa* hay is causing
him to get this? (he was on grass/timothy/clover hay before I got
him)
Can this rich hay cause him to founder? Or is that only if he is
overfed? Should I put him on lower protein hay?
The previous owner said he did founder once due to improper cooling
after being worked heavily by one of her neighborhood kids.
I'm really walking on eggshells! I've been keeping a close eye on
him and he's perky, alert, and in great health other than the squitts.
Should I be worried?
Help! Tina
|
698.10 | | NHL::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Wed Sep 14 1988 13:23 | 13 |
| Alfalfa could be the problem. We have seen this as a result of
changing the alfalfa content of our hay before. I generally try
to stay at a mix of less than 40% alfalfa in our hay and much prefer
a timothy hay. I would be very careful of what you feed, both how
much and its nutritional value. I've heard that Ponies are much
more succesptible to founder caused by feed changes (usually when
going from poor feed to a rich feed). You have to judge the amount
to feed based on the animal. We have horses that don't get any
more than you are feeding and are still plump. I would have the
vet come down just to be sure something serious isn't going on here.
Bob
|
698.11 | Peppermint Kaopectate | MEDUSA::STILES | | Fri Dec 09 1988 16:27 | 15 |
|
I have a 25+ year old horse that has the same problem periodically
(usually at about 6 month intervals). The first time I panicked
and called the Vet immediately. She checked him for virus' etc
and finally decided it was "Old Age". A few bottles of Kaopectate
later, and he was fine. Now, whenever it happens, I just give him
a bottle or two at the first signs and he usually clears up in 1
to 2 days.
I have also noticed this happens after a radical change such as
moving to a new barn. Maybe it's nerves! I don't know!
Hope your pony is better by now... but thought I'd reply anyways!
kathy
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698.12 | Diarrhea! | GENT::TINA | | Wed Aug 28 1991 10:05 | 32 |
|
Heat and Diarrhea
Well Pookie has it again -- Diarrhea. It seems to happen every time
there is a drastic weather change as in this past week.
I have reviewed note #698 on Diarrhea and noticed that some of the
noters felt it could be too much alfalfa. The hay Pook currently is on
is a bit more rich and has more alfalfa. I am going to try to get some
less rich hay from the woman I board with and give that a try.
Something else...I add 1 tablespoon of salt to his morning and
afternoon rations because the little darling will not use salt licks.
Doing this has kept him (I believe anyway based on previous years when
he didn't get the salt added to his food) from getting the squirts all
summer until now (the dr recommended the salt). Actually he is on the
same hay he has been on all summer too so that is why I am not sure
that it is the alfalfa, but who knows. He was00 wormed in mid-July and
is due to be done this week. He also gets 2 tablespoons of MSM a day
(dr's orders). I feed him 4 qts of strider and 1 qt of rider a day.
This condition happens regularly and then just goes away. By regularly
I mean on very hot days or in extreme weather changes. He has had it
this time for several days now (he drinks a bathtub of water every
two days +/-) so I am not worried about him getting dehydrated. Not
only is this condition evident when he poops but when he passes gas
he drips all down himself. He has to get a butt bath everyday he has
it. Has anyone else experienced this?
Pookie is 20 +/- years old.
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