T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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746.1 | something? | PHILEM::MATTHEWS | i m!te B blonde but !'m not stup!d. | Tue Oct 11 1988 10:39 | 25 |
| yes i think i have. i might have put a note in here about it..
my friends horse (buffy) died , i have you call her, but her mother
passed away and i dont know how to get in touch with her..
anyway they took her up to rochester in nh. and she was thrushing
against the walls, she took her eye out doin so. they hoisted up
in a truck to take her to the clinic.. i think they did blood work
and found nothing... at the end of it all i think she broke her
neck or her back... anyway they did an autopsy and found that she
***might*** (might now, they dont know for sure) have had a stroke
/ heartattack... she was a young horse, i used to school her at
shows for cheryl, i think she was four.... anyway, buffy used to
go to shows and she would pin her ears and threaten to bite all
the time and cheryl and her mom said that she wasnt like that at
home... i found it questionable... but i did say that there might
be something wrong with her... 6 months later she got sick...
i dont know if that is related but i wanted to pass that info on..
also i just thought you might want to call rochester clinic in n.h.
and ask them, i dont remember when it was i think it was a couple
of years ago, and i also dont know the name of the vet...
hope this helps some.. and i'm sorry about your horses.
wendy o'
|
746.2 | | MEIS::SCRAGGS | | Tue Oct 11 1988 11:02 | 13 |
|
I don't really know if Colitis (sp) is the same in all cases, but
my first horse died of it when I was 16, she too was 16. It came
on very suddenly and didn't last for more than 8 hours. The sysmptoms
to start were she would not eat anything, very unlike this horse,
even with normal bouts of colic, she'd go after anything. She kept
laying down and rolling, then bolting up. It started at approx 9am
we had two vets with her until approx. 7pm when we decided that
without constant help or possible surgery she would die, we had
her put down. I don't think a horse with Colitis could survive
very long, maybe other noters have some input here?
Marianne
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746.3 | Two more cases | DELNI::L_MCCORMACK | | Tue Oct 11 1988 12:15 | 35 |
|
I have a couple of related cases. When my stallion coliced,
he was operated on at Rochester N.H. Clinic. He was diagonosed
with enteritis (like colitis) possibly saminella. I asked if
the saminella could have been caused by my geese getting into
the water trough to take a bath and was told yes. I believe
bird droppings can contaminate the water too. Maybe you might
have your water tested. I've locked my geese into a pen away
from the brook and the trough the horses drink from and haven't
had any trouble.
The other case concerns a friend from Lunenburg. The horse
wasn't herself for a couple of months but was not sick. Just
wasn't acting like she usually did. One day she just dropped
to the ground and couldn't get up. This continued to happen.
The horse would get up then fall over again. The vet. didn't
know what was wrong so the mare was sent to Rochester for
testing. The mare continued to stumble against the walls,
fall down, and they thought it might be some spinal trouble.
The vets said it was either a connective tissue disease,
spinal injury or disease or another condition that I can't
remember. The mare was there a week for testing and had run
up over $1000.00 bill. More testing was needed to discover
what was wrong and the owner didn't have the money so she had
the horse put down. She didn't have an autopsy done either.
Sounds something like what your horse was suffering from. A
new disease or virus in the making?
So sorry about your horses. I know what it feels like to sit
up night after night worrying.
Linda
|
746.4 | | PBA::KEIRAN | | Thu Oct 13 1988 13:31 | 32 |
| Ten years ago, I had a horse that had some of the same symptoms
that your horses had. She got very sick in the beginning of the
summer with what seemed like colic. As time went on, she ran a
fever of 107 and couldn't put her head down to eat because she
would lose her balance. We treated her with every type of drug
available, all to no avail. She ended up dying on her own, and
the vet did an autopsy and found absolutely nothing. Like your
horse, this horse had a white count of 30,000 so she was fighting
an infection somewhere. We ended up figuring out that she most
likely had a brain tumor, because in the autopsy we didn't go
into her head. She was a funny horse to ride because some days
she was great, and other days, I would get off and walk home
because I was literally afraid of getting killed she acted so
stupid, which would also be explained if she did have a brain
tumor. I also had a 4 year old horse die of a heart attack (I
have such great luck!) that was a standardbred off the track.
When racing, she used to just stop on the track for no reason,
but as it turns out it was because her heart was defective.
I would go to the barn and find her lying down, and I would
just proceed to work around her, figuring she was tired. One
night we found her in atrial(sp?) fibulation, where her heartbeat
was completely irregular, caused by a congential disease. I
decided to put her down the following day because I couldn't see
allowing her to suffer. Did your vet offer any explination as to
what has happened to these horses? Is there any type of grass or
anything that they got into that could have made them sick? It
just seems so weird this happened to two horses in the same place
around the same time.
|
746.5 | Vet's Diagnosis | GENRAL::TRESEDER | | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:57 | 35 |
| I just talked to the vet yesterday. He will never know what
Mikey had for sure because we didn't do an autopsy on him, but
he did say that it could have been related to what his mother
had. He seemed to think that Mikey had two seperate illnesses.
The first being colitas -- which is just a general term for
something wrong with the digestive system, I think mainly the
bowels or intestines. He thought that the colitas weakened
Mikey's defenses, and then he got attacked by something else.
That something else he thinks might have been Rhino. What he
is speculating happened to the mare is that she died of Rhino.
He said that some horses react to it severly, creating more of
a problem than it really is. Anyway, he thought that it attacked
her spinal cord, then her immune system attacked the rhino virus,
then started attacking her spinal cord as well. He said that in
Mikey's case, since he was severly stressed, the second illness
that caused his death could have possibly been his body reacting
to a rhino virus similar to how his mother's did, and he just
wasn't able to pull through. He did say that rhino isn't hereditary,
but how a horse reacts to the virus could be. Anyway, they tested
the most recent baby, and she showed no signs of it. We also
have a yearling filly out of the same mare that we will have tested
soon.
I really appreciate all your inputs! Some of the things I think
might be related, but I guess we'll never know. What I was hoping
is that someone out there had something that was exactly the same
as what I've had, AND they knew what it was ... I know ... a little
unrealistic! Anyway, if there are any more inputs, I'll be interested
forever!
Thanks,
Lori
|
746.6 | | PBA::KEIRAN | | Fri Oct 14 1988 16:12 | 9 |
| You should ask your vet if the mare was given a Rhino shot during pregnancy
as she should have been. I would that that the vaccine would be
good for a year after it was given, as my horses only have it once
a year. My pregnant mare had it at the beginning of her pregnancy,
and will get one again this month, one in her 7th month and one
in her 9th. The rhino virus causes pregnant mares to abort, and
my friends horse never was vaccined with rhino through her whole
pregnancy, and ended up aborting in the 10th month.
|
746.7 | Yes, we vaccinated | GENRAL::TRESEDER | | Fri Oct 14 1988 16:50 | 12 |
| Yes, the mare had been given three rhino shots each year for
the past three years ... The vet said that the rhino shot does
not protect the horse from getting rhino, but that its purpose
is to aviod abortion. He also said that the particular type
of rhino that was found in the mare cannot be vaccinated against.
The mare was also vaccinated for rhino three times when she was
pregnant with Mikey ... so if he did have rhino, the vaccination
that he got when he was in the womb did not prevent it from showing
up later in life. By the way, Mikey was five ...
Lori
|
746.8 | EQUUS ARTICLE | DPDMAI::LOWERY | Terry Lowery, Dallas,TX (DLO) | Mon Oct 31 1988 12:19 | 13 |
| I just read an article in the November issue of EQUUS concerning
a horse who keep losing his balance periodically. I recall the
horse had some similar symptoms, but you might see if you can locate
the article. As I recall, the vet could find nothing wrong with
the horse even from testing. However, the horse eventually died
and after the necrospy the vet found that a spinal parasite had
caused the problem. Unfortunately, there does not seem to be a
treatment or cure for the problem yet. I certainly hope your horse's
problem is much easier to solve.
Terry
|
746.9 | Thanks | GENRAL::TRESEDER | | Tue Nov 01 1988 13:40 | 3 |
| Thanks Terry ... I'll pick up a copy.
Lori
|