flaxen
Well-Known Member
YOU NEED TO GET YOUR VET TO COME AND SWAB YOUR HORSE'S LEG AND SEND IT AWAY TO A LABORATORY FOR CULTURE AND SENSITIVITY.
My mare started with what looked like bad mud fever november/ december having never had it previously and it got worse despite being on norodine antibiotics in her food.
After swabbing her leg it turned out she had pseudomonas and streptococcus. This bug is highly resistant to antibiotics and the only drug that it responds to is enrofloxacin ( baytril). My mare is in foal and cant have baytril as it will cause foetal defects. She was sedated and her leg tubbed in as hot water as she could tolerate with iodine in it so I could get all the scabs off ( scabs extended up above her fetlock joint) we then used a combination of flamazine and intrasite ( my mare had an area of skin that was sloughing off on the front of her fetlock that had to be dressed so was covered in intrasite gel and then melalin applied and bandaged).
After 2 weeks of washing her leg in dilute iodine everyday and pulling any stray scabs off , drying her leg and then applying flamazine her leg healed and she is now back out in the field. She was on box rest for 2.5 months. She now wears equi chaps in the field as once they have had pseudomonas they are likely to get it again.
There has been a lot of horses with pseudomonas this year, I am a veterinary nurse and have seen a few horses being referred to vet schools with it as it wont clear up, the horses find it painful and usually need sedating every day to have it treated.
My mare started with what looked like bad mud fever november/ december having never had it previously and it got worse despite being on norodine antibiotics in her food.
After swabbing her leg it turned out she had pseudomonas and streptococcus. This bug is highly resistant to antibiotics and the only drug that it responds to is enrofloxacin ( baytril). My mare is in foal and cant have baytril as it will cause foetal defects. She was sedated and her leg tubbed in as hot water as she could tolerate with iodine in it so I could get all the scabs off ( scabs extended up above her fetlock joint) we then used a combination of flamazine and intrasite ( my mare had an area of skin that was sloughing off on the front of her fetlock that had to be dressed so was covered in intrasite gel and then melalin applied and bandaged).
After 2 weeks of washing her leg in dilute iodine everyday and pulling any stray scabs off , drying her leg and then applying flamazine her leg healed and she is now back out in the field. She was on box rest for 2.5 months. She now wears equi chaps in the field as once they have had pseudomonas they are likely to get it again.
There has been a lot of horses with pseudomonas this year, I am a veterinary nurse and have seen a few horses being referred to vet schools with it as it wont clear up, the horses find it painful and usually need sedating every day to have it treated.