stilltrying
Well-Known Member
Hi all thought Id sound out the wealth of experience on here to see if anyone can shed any light as to what might be wrong with my friends horse. BTW this is not a money saving short cut, he is being seen by a vet.
He has recently become less and less happy about being saddled/girthed, to the point of being quite nasty. Saddle was checked, girth was changed, physio checked his back (tight behind saddle), but his behaviour worsened.
He is 5 yrs old and 7/8ths thoroughbred (17 hands). He is very lean, verging on poor, so because of this coupled with the grumpiness the feeling was it could be ulcers.
I dont have any experience of ulcers myself and whilst his management wouldnt necessarily point to them (plenty of turnout in company, adlib hay when in, light work and a stress free lifestyle, and low sugar diet as is barefoot), I gather these things can sometimes just happen.
Physio came back out and said he was extremely sore behind the girth on his left hand side, and again she felt it could be ulcers.
He was scoped 10 days ago and was found to have grade 2 ulcers. The vet felt that whilst the ulcers werent particularly bad, they could well be the cause of his unhappiness and he has been given 2 weeks gastroguard.
However, what concerns me is the way he moves. He comes out of his stable stiff as a board, and when I ask him to turn back around, his tail kinks up to one side. He does this when walking uphill, the tail lifts and curls. He looks to me like he is in pain.
This could of course be typical of a horse with ulcers, as I say I have no experience of them. So I guess Im asking if this is standard behaviour for a horse with ulcers, or if it is a case of actually a lot of horses will have low grade ulcers if they are scoped and therefore there could be something else troubling the poor chap.
I really feel for my friend shes tried so hard with this one to get him right (he damaged his DDFT as a 3 year old and it was a long slow recovery).
Any thoughts / suggestions welcomed!
He has recently become less and less happy about being saddled/girthed, to the point of being quite nasty. Saddle was checked, girth was changed, physio checked his back (tight behind saddle), but his behaviour worsened.
He is 5 yrs old and 7/8ths thoroughbred (17 hands). He is very lean, verging on poor, so because of this coupled with the grumpiness the feeling was it could be ulcers.
I dont have any experience of ulcers myself and whilst his management wouldnt necessarily point to them (plenty of turnout in company, adlib hay when in, light work and a stress free lifestyle, and low sugar diet as is barefoot), I gather these things can sometimes just happen.
Physio came back out and said he was extremely sore behind the girth on his left hand side, and again she felt it could be ulcers.
He was scoped 10 days ago and was found to have grade 2 ulcers. The vet felt that whilst the ulcers werent particularly bad, they could well be the cause of his unhappiness and he has been given 2 weeks gastroguard.
However, what concerns me is the way he moves. He comes out of his stable stiff as a board, and when I ask him to turn back around, his tail kinks up to one side. He does this when walking uphill, the tail lifts and curls. He looks to me like he is in pain.
This could of course be typical of a horse with ulcers, as I say I have no experience of them. So I guess Im asking if this is standard behaviour for a horse with ulcers, or if it is a case of actually a lot of horses will have low grade ulcers if they are scoped and therefore there could be something else troubling the poor chap.
I really feel for my friend shes tried so hard with this one to get him right (he damaged his DDFT as a 3 year old and it was a long slow recovery).
Any thoughts / suggestions welcomed!