Befnee
New User
OK this is going to be an epic read so be warned grab yourself a cuppa and settle in for a long read but I'd really appreciate it if you do.......
So long story short ...my horses have had what the vets are asssuming and pretty sure is acorn/oak leave poisioning. I am beating myself up about it beyond belief so if the negative comments about me being proactive about keeping them away from the trees could be kept away that would be great. I didn't realise the grass had got so poor in the paddock and we only moved to this yard in July so didn't know the land. I wasn't aware they were eating them with lack of grass and now it's too late. I already hate myself.
It has been the week from hell..4 out of 5 of them have been affected and I have had vets out every day, sometimes twice a day. Diarrhoea went through the affected 4 and severe weight loss, lack of appetite 2 got dehydration whilst 2 cleared up much faster (on probiotics and antibiotics on stand by) so can't of had such an exposure to them. The older TB (my husbands retired first horse) began a colic cycle which we fought for 3 days with the vets to save him. He died in the early hours of Friday morning. We are devastated.
My main focus is now the ones that are left. As blunt as that is. The other one who had dehydration is still fighting. He hasn't had colic symptoms but is much younger and a fighter. He still has bad diarrhoea but limited to 1 every 1-2 hours now which is better than a week ago at the beginning. They have all dropped weight but this one looks awful. I want to cry looking at him. I know it's the diarrhoea but i need it under control. Vet out yesterday again as one of the other who recovered quickly was a slightly colicky and I was taking no chances. He gave the diarrhoea one more buscapan and painkillers to tide him over and try and get his belly a bit comfier. I'm now syringing the probiotics into him mixed with water as he is refusing to eat his feeds so the vet said that's the thing that's going to get his droppings right.
So he's drinking really well so keeping dehydration at bay and he self medicates with his salt lick well. Vets happy he's not dehydrated like at the beginning. He in at night and out during the day on a small fenced area of grass that I move every day out the front of the stables. He'll eat grass during the day, but at night will only pick at his haynet. The vet said not to feed sugar or molasses as theyre not going to help his belly right now so I'm offering him 3 feeds of dengie molasses free Alfa A a day which he picks at. After a week of barely eating anything but grass in the day I've started getting inventive trying to mix through a handful of normal Alfa, sprinking some of the build up cubes on to tempt him. Tried it warm, tried it on his door instead of from the floor. Etc ..Everything with the plain feed I've got.
I'm going to ask the vet tomorrow morning for some ulcer gold to see if that helps. I got excited when I brought him in this afternoon and he started eating his Haynet which he went at for about 5 minutes which is an improvement but after he stoppedt I then had to syringe all his stuff in so he went off everything after that in a huff as he hates being dosed with stuff orally.
Generally it's been a very stressful week for him. He hates vets. He sees them coming and is already worked up. Hates needles and it's a fight to get them in and he's had his fair share of them this week. That and his stable and herd mate died next door to him 2 days ago. So I get that his stress levels must be sky high.
I'm looking for advice... has anyone been through this and out the other side? He's a very poor condition score now. Any ideas on what to tempt him to eat with bearing in mind I have to take into consideration his sensitive stomach so don't want to make huge changes? It's been a bit of an essay so thanks if you stuck to he end!! I have seriously condensed what has happened this week so probably left stuff out.
Edited to add: just to say no temperatures the whole way through
So long story short ...my horses have had what the vets are asssuming and pretty sure is acorn/oak leave poisioning. I am beating myself up about it beyond belief so if the negative comments about me being proactive about keeping them away from the trees could be kept away that would be great. I didn't realise the grass had got so poor in the paddock and we only moved to this yard in July so didn't know the land. I wasn't aware they were eating them with lack of grass and now it's too late. I already hate myself.
It has been the week from hell..4 out of 5 of them have been affected and I have had vets out every day, sometimes twice a day. Diarrhoea went through the affected 4 and severe weight loss, lack of appetite 2 got dehydration whilst 2 cleared up much faster (on probiotics and antibiotics on stand by) so can't of had such an exposure to them. The older TB (my husbands retired first horse) began a colic cycle which we fought for 3 days with the vets to save him. He died in the early hours of Friday morning. We are devastated.
My main focus is now the ones that are left. As blunt as that is. The other one who had dehydration is still fighting. He hasn't had colic symptoms but is much younger and a fighter. He still has bad diarrhoea but limited to 1 every 1-2 hours now which is better than a week ago at the beginning. They have all dropped weight but this one looks awful. I want to cry looking at him. I know it's the diarrhoea but i need it under control. Vet out yesterday again as one of the other who recovered quickly was a slightly colicky and I was taking no chances. He gave the diarrhoea one more buscapan and painkillers to tide him over and try and get his belly a bit comfier. I'm now syringing the probiotics into him mixed with water as he is refusing to eat his feeds so the vet said that's the thing that's going to get his droppings right.
So he's drinking really well so keeping dehydration at bay and he self medicates with his salt lick well. Vets happy he's not dehydrated like at the beginning. He in at night and out during the day on a small fenced area of grass that I move every day out the front of the stables. He'll eat grass during the day, but at night will only pick at his haynet. The vet said not to feed sugar or molasses as theyre not going to help his belly right now so I'm offering him 3 feeds of dengie molasses free Alfa A a day which he picks at. After a week of barely eating anything but grass in the day I've started getting inventive trying to mix through a handful of normal Alfa, sprinking some of the build up cubes on to tempt him. Tried it warm, tried it on his door instead of from the floor. Etc ..Everything with the plain feed I've got.
I'm going to ask the vet tomorrow morning for some ulcer gold to see if that helps. I got excited when I brought him in this afternoon and he started eating his Haynet which he went at for about 5 minutes which is an improvement but after he stoppedt I then had to syringe all his stuff in so he went off everything after that in a huff as he hates being dosed with stuff orally.
Generally it's been a very stressful week for him. He hates vets. He sees them coming and is already worked up. Hates needles and it's a fight to get them in and he's had his fair share of them this week. That and his stable and herd mate died next door to him 2 days ago. So I get that his stress levels must be sky high.
I'm looking for advice... has anyone been through this and out the other side? He's a very poor condition score now. Any ideas on what to tempt him to eat with bearing in mind I have to take into consideration his sensitive stomach so don't want to make huge changes? It's been a bit of an essay so thanks if you stuck to he end!! I have seriously condensed what has happened this week so probably left stuff out.
Edited to add: just to say no temperatures the whole way through
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