paddy555
Well-Known Member
I'm not keen on the way this forum prescribes vitamin e as some sort of miracle cure. Its is very useful in the case of deficiencies and in type 1 PSSM with the correct diet and management changes. I feed it year round to horses with no PSSM or PSSM type symptoms, as its a useful supplement. For the treatment of PSSM you need to test for type 1 first.
The OP is clutching at straws hoping the addition of the wrong type of vitamin e is going to fix everything, which is almost certainly not the case with this horse, absolutely not the case unless diet and management is addressed, and definitely not the case if the horse has type 2 PSSM. It would be easy to try vitamin e, have no huge improvement, then rule out PSSM when it may still be an issue. But before any of that, other pre exisiting issues need to be ruled out or its just taking misguided shots in the dark.
I don't see it as a miracle cure. I see it firstly as the fact that I suspect many are short of vit E being included in their diet. In the old days horses lived on grass. Now grass is strictly limited because of lami etc.
Feeds are lacking in quality E. There is a push to forage based diets.
You said yourself this horse is unlikely to be PSSM1. So whilst a negative test may be useful that £35 would go some way towards paying for E.
You say you feed E all year round to non PSSM horses. This OP doesn't and it appears Lari's previous owner didn't either so surely straight away you have the potential for a problem. He could well be deficient PSSM or not. He may not be PSSM he could simply be vit E deficient.
I cannot see it is clutching at straws to rectify the vit E situation and try an increased dosage as a trial. Seems to me to be a perfectly simple thing to do to rule it out.
She bought the wrong type of oil. Many of us buy the wrong product through ignorance.
Surely she would be addressing diet and management if vit E was supplemented. You do.