PennyJ
Well-Known Member
Is anyone able to offer me any crumbs of comfort on this please?
I have 10 week old New Forest pony colt foal, who has been diagnosed with this and is currently having the oxytetracycline injections and has had toe extensions put on his front hooves this morning. We are heartbroken, not quite sure how we have found ourselves in this position, they have been part stabled throughout, hay weighed, no hard feed, non edible bedding. Still mum has done him "too well" or else there is something congenitally wrong with him, which actually seems to be the way the vet and farrier are starting to think.
Current treatment is a week on box rest for the 2 of them, mum being on laminitis rations of 1.5% bodyweight per day to try and bring down the quality and quanitity of her milk. If no improvement in his condition by next week then he is to be weaned. If still no improvement then I am starting to prepare myself for the worst, as what future will he have?
I have 10 week old New Forest pony colt foal, who has been diagnosed with this and is currently having the oxytetracycline injections and has had toe extensions put on his front hooves this morning. We are heartbroken, not quite sure how we have found ourselves in this position, they have been part stabled throughout, hay weighed, no hard feed, non edible bedding. Still mum has done him "too well" or else there is something congenitally wrong with him, which actually seems to be the way the vet and farrier are starting to think.
Current treatment is a week on box rest for the 2 of them, mum being on laminitis rations of 1.5% bodyweight per day to try and bring down the quality and quanitity of her milk. If no improvement in his condition by next week then he is to be weaned. If still no improvement then I am starting to prepare myself for the worst, as what future will he have?