TBmare92
Well-Known Member
Hi
My horse had the dentist today, half way through having his teeth done he collapsed. I'm just wondering if stress may have caused this?
he had been given 5ml of the oral sedative- Acepromazine 35g in a ten ml tube- an hour before this happened (he weighs over 650kg so this is a low dose, vet advised nearly twice this and said I could increase if needed as it was a safe drug). I gave My mare 4mls from the same tube and she had no adverse affects so it wasn't a dodgy tube. My gelding has also had this sedation before at a higher dose and been fine. he didn't appear to be particularly sedated up to the point of collapse, he was more subdued but still putting up some resistance to his teeth being done (ie leaning back, raising his head but nothing serious). Then all of a sudden he just wobbled and literally keeled over, a few seconds later we manged to get him standing but he was very wobbly -he's fine now and eating in the field heart rate temp all normal.
Nothing like this has happened before.
I must add that the last time he had his teeth done the vet (I used a specialist dentist this time not vet) left the rasp in my horses mouth (vet thought he was going to be naughty) and my horse who was heavily sedated using iv sedative lost his balance as he had been leaning into the rasp lunged forward and hit his mouth on the stable wall, causing the rasp to be driven into the soft pallet at the back of his mouth, he ended up in equine hospital for a few days. it's taken the last few months to get him to trust people near his mouth again but he's been pretty much back to normal now.
(I spoke to vets she said to keep an eye on him and to call her if he acts strangely again, she just said it was very strange and wasn't sure what caused it)
Sorry for the essay but could he have acted this way because of stress? The dentist suggested he might have just shut down due to stress but it's a new one on me!
Thanks for reading
My horse had the dentist today, half way through having his teeth done he collapsed. I'm just wondering if stress may have caused this?
he had been given 5ml of the oral sedative- Acepromazine 35g in a ten ml tube- an hour before this happened (he weighs over 650kg so this is a low dose, vet advised nearly twice this and said I could increase if needed as it was a safe drug). I gave My mare 4mls from the same tube and she had no adverse affects so it wasn't a dodgy tube. My gelding has also had this sedation before at a higher dose and been fine. he didn't appear to be particularly sedated up to the point of collapse, he was more subdued but still putting up some resistance to his teeth being done (ie leaning back, raising his head but nothing serious). Then all of a sudden he just wobbled and literally keeled over, a few seconds later we manged to get him standing but he was very wobbly -he's fine now and eating in the field heart rate temp all normal.
Nothing like this has happened before.
I must add that the last time he had his teeth done the vet (I used a specialist dentist this time not vet) left the rasp in my horses mouth (vet thought he was going to be naughty) and my horse who was heavily sedated using iv sedative lost his balance as he had been leaning into the rasp lunged forward and hit his mouth on the stable wall, causing the rasp to be driven into the soft pallet at the back of his mouth, he ended up in equine hospital for a few days. it's taken the last few months to get him to trust people near his mouth again but he's been pretty much back to normal now.
(I spoke to vets she said to keep an eye on him and to call her if he acts strangely again, she just said it was very strange and wasn't sure what caused it)
Sorry for the essay but could he have acted this way because of stress? The dentist suggested he might have just shut down due to stress but it's a new one on me!
Thanks for reading