foxy1
Well-Known Member
Just another thought, would your vet be open to you trying a drug to treat nerve pain like Gabapentin for example? Could help reduce inflammation if his nerves in head/neck are inflamed?
Yes, I had everything x-rayed, he was quite expensive so I went all out for the vetting.Was his neck xrayed when you bought him? I know necks are not routinely looked at in the UK, although I believe they should be.
Beautiful horse, significant difference in stride length between the two videos.
I’m sure he would. And I also know that he’s referred some to PENS treatment and electro acupuncture, so there are many options left to try.Just another thought, would your vet be open to you trying a drug to treat nerve pain like Gabapentin for example? Could help reduce inflammation if his nerves in head/neck are inflamed?
At least you have a reason. That’s not usually the case, so you have a head start on helping him feel better. Keeping fingers crossed something works.So now I know more! He has vasomotorisk rhinitis, which is where the mucous membranes of his nose and upper airways react as if he had hayfever but without actually being allergic. So he is reacting to pollen, probably rape or the forrest next to the yard, and the dust of the arena, without being proper allergic.
This is both good and bad news. Good is that now there are a few things to try and that he is hopefully only reacting during the summertime, bad is that there is no guarantee that anything works and we might just have to live with him shaking May-September.
Pines and privets according to this article. Didn't OP say she was by a forest?How interesting. I'm aware of horses that seem to be affected by the trees, or something, around the yard I'm at around August time. I'll be following with interest.
Have we any horticulturists on the forum who might hazard a guess what tree/plant could be responsible?
.
Oh flipping heck not again.Yes, I’m almost in a forrest. It’s mostly beech, but also oak, red fir/spruce - not sure which, birch, ash, alder (??? Google translated this one!), elm and elder. So there’s pretty much everything.
Took my boy out on the lunge today and after only 30 hours back, he’s headshaking again. So I guess it’s pretty safe to say that something on/around the yard is the trigger![]()
Oh flipping heck not again.
What on earth are your plans now?
Hats off to you for making the effort to see if it was environmental. That was worthwhile even though it doesn't help you in the long run. It's a total nightmare.
If you find a new yard maybe see if they do holiday livery for a week or something. So you can see if it makes any difference.Yeah, it’s so frustrating! But at least I now know that there’s something locally that triggers him. I mean, I’ll give him a few more days to settle in again, but I think it was quite a difference from just the day before and I’m not sure I can attribute it all to just him remembering it from before. So I guess I’ll have to find a new yard. I have small children so not having to drive too far is definitely a priority. I’ll just have to find somewhere not right next to a forrest and then see if that does it and if not I’ll find something further away.
Yes, I’m almost in a forrest. It’s mostly beech, but also oak, red fir/spruce - not sure which, birch, ash, alder (??? Google translated this one!), elm and elder. So there’s pretty much everything.
Took my boy out on the lunge today and after only 30 hours back, he’s headshaking again. So I guess it’s pretty safe to say that something on/around the yard is the trigger![]()
We are opposite spruce and when I ride Louis through there his breathing gets bad and he coughs sometimes, his breathing also gets bad around May time some years his not my horse that head shakes though but it definitely affects his breathing.Yes, I’m almost in a forrest. It’s mostly beech, but also oak, red fir/spruce - not sure which, birch, ash, alder (??? Google translated this one!), elm and elder. So there’s pretty much everything.
Took my boy out on the lunge today and after only 30 hours back, he’s headshaking again. So I guess it’s pretty safe to say that something on/around the yard is the trigger![]()
I just started volunteering at an animal rescue center and there is one stallion that has been “weaving “(?) It was on a day that our local weather report said that the barometer was dipping really low and fast and it could bring on migraines ( in people) ….then today, I was there and noticed the same horse was doing the weaving thing ( pacing back and forth with a rhythm of swinging his head as he’s pacing….and the weather reports say it’s going to be stormy tomorrow with lots of wind and rain…. Can this cause migraines in horses as well as people? I know when the weather changes a day before because my hips tell me so! I just wondered if it works the same with horses as it does people, and what can I do to alleviate a migraine,, is it best not to touch or stimulate the poor horse… he’s obviously miserable according to his body language…I think that’s fabulous! Im excited for you to hopefully get a cure![]()
I would imagine , yea they could suffer, diagnosing could be tricky. A friends mare was pts after they thought uveitis, turns out at the post mortem, she had a tumour behind her eye that would be causing migraines they thought.I just started volunteering at an animal rescue center and there is one stallion that has been “weaving “(?) It was on a day that our local weather report said that the barometer was dipping really low and fast and it could bring on migraines ( in people) ….then today, I was there and noticed the same horse was doing the weaving thing ( pacing back and forth with a rhythm of swinging his head as he’s pacing….and the weather reports say it’s going to be stormy tomorrow with lots of wind and rain…. Can this cause migraines in horses as well as people? I know when the weather changes a day before because my hips tell me so! I just wondered if it works the same with horses as it does people, and what can I do to alleviate a migraine,, is it best not to touch or stimulate the poor horse… he’s obviously miserable according to his body language…
Just read this thread and clicked on the post to quote then realised it’s very old… just for info my mare started headshaking when I moved her to a new yard and I used the equilibrium nose nets which helped , she did this for the whole 8 years we were there during the summer months. Moved to another yard and headshaking stopped almost immediately, the only thing different with the yards was that the first had rape fields all around it ..I bought my horse in the end of November after losing my old mare. Not a complete beginner here, I’ve had horses for 30 years and ridden advanced medium.
5 staged vetting was perfect.
A new saddle was bought and fitted in January, teeth were checked in April.
End of May/beginning of June I noticed him being very irritated by flies, but I soon realised that he was also shaking his head when there were no bugs. He’s only headshaking during work, both ridden and lunged, but not in the field or stable.
I began investigating and trying out a few things:
Nose net - no difference
fly mask - no difference
Temperature- no difference
Outdoor/indoor school - no difference
Sunshine/clouds - no difference
Halter/bridle/cavesson - no difference
Nose band/no noseband - no difference
Windy/no wind - no difference
Light drizzle/no rain - no difference
Grass pollen high/low - no difference
Cetirizine - no difference
School/forrest - no difference
Bugs - no difference
Nostrils cleansed/left untouched - no difference
Ridden/lunged - no difference
So… so far nothing has made any difference. It’s only gotten worse since first observed and he’s been out of work all of July.
I’ve had his teeth re-checked and x-rayed, nothing there. The chiropractor (vet) has been out twice and only found him to be a bit tight in the fascia around his left hind and the facial fascia.
I’ve started him up on magnesium, a supplement supporting the immune system and start giving NAF Shake relief from tomorrow. And I’m contemplating renting the eVysor goggles to try that for a few weeks, even though there is no difference between indoor/outdoor or if the sun is shining or not.
There is a rape field next to the yard that will be harvested in the next couple of weeks, so that might also make a difference.
The insurance is on board with scintigraphy, but there’s only one clinic that does it and that’s half way across the country. My local clinic on the other hand is very well versed in headshaking, one of their vets is one always recommended online to seek out if your horse starts headshaking. So I’m having a hard time deciding what to do next. Do I start with the local clinic and have blood work done for allergy and borrelia, do lameness investigation, check the hyoid, eyes, ears, do endoscopy etc or do I do the scintigraphy first?
I don’t even know if I’m asking for advice or just venting! I’m just very frustrated.
Old, but still relevant.Just read this thread and clicked on the post to quote then realised it’s very old… just for info my mare started headshaking when I moved her to a new yard and I used the equilibrium nose nets which helped , she did this for the whole 8 years we were there during the summer months. Moved to another yard and headshaking stopped almost immediately, the only thing different with the yards was that the first had rape fields all around it ..
I don’t think you can compare headshaking and weaving.I just started volunteering at an animal rescue center and there is one stallion that has been “weaving “(?) It was on a day that our local weather report said that the barometer was dipping really low and fast and it could bring on migraines ( in people) ….then today, I was there and noticed the same horse was doing the weaving thing ( pacing back and forth with a rhythm of swinging his head as he’s pacing….and the weather reports say it’s going to be stormy tomorrow with lots of wind and rain…. Can this cause migraines in horses as well as people? I know when the weather changes a day before because my hips tell me so! I just wondered if it works the same with horses as it does people, and what can I do to alleviate a migraine,, is it best not to touch or stimulate the poor horse… he’s obviously miserable according to his body language…
No not far only 7 mins drive as opposed to 2 mins. In her case it was the rape, when I first got her she was kept 20 mins drive away for just over 2 years and no headshaking .. it started in the first summer and she was ok all winter . Glad you have found somewhere for him and he is behaving betterOld, but still relevant.
Thank you. Did you move far away?
No not far only 7 mins drive as opposed to 2 mins. In her case it was the rape, when I first got her she was kept 20 mins drive away for just over 2 years and no headshaking .. it started in the first summer and she was ok all winter . Glad you have found somewhere for him and he is behaving better