Lotty
Well-Known Member
Wagtail - Just posting to say I'm thinking about you both and really hope she gets better soon. As you know, I've been through this a few years ago and its horrible. Sending you good luck vibes.
Wagtail - Just posting to say I'm thinking about you both and really hope she gets better soon. As you know, I've been through this a few years ago and its horrible. Sending you good luck vibes.
Are you sure?? I disagree with this. Straw is a the woody fibrous stem - it should be high in fibre and lignin which is not overly digestible.
Hay can be high in sugar, hence soaking it to leech out the sugars, but straw has always been known as a low nutritional value fibre feedstuff.
Hope she hets better soon!
If she gets lammie quite recurrently have you considered testing for cushings disease??
They get lammie quite a lot and dont always have the tell tale symptoms of a horse with cushings. I discovered my pony has it this week and he has no clinical signs of cushings other than slight laminitis, which he is managed very strictly for.
And autumn/spring are peak times for it.
Pergolide is the drug used to treat it and will stop the laminitis from frequently occuring due to the metabolic changes which cause it.
Its worth the test.
xxx
Check out Nitroxide this makes the body heal itself its brilliant. My friends horse couldnt get up but within 3 hrs she was up and now just on a maintenance.
Just shows you how different horses react . Marks haylage is what d was on Before the flareup . The best is founderguard as its a preventitive but. Protexin us what vets Advise
And thanks everyone. Your good vibes must be working. I led her out today (having had no danilon) and she looked sound. Her pulses are gone! I know she is not quite 100% because she has a kind of bounce to her walk when she is completely right and it wasn't there. But a vet wouldn't have noticed. So she is staying in again today, and possibly tomorrow, but can hopefully go out by Sunday/Monday. Yay!![]()
That's excellent news! I hope she's back to normal very soon![]()
Thank you. Will look into those things. I have my charcoal now but can't work out how to open the tub. Have tried everything.
Leviathan, I think the key with my girl is keeping her on the metformin. Even though she had tested negative last year to IR and I refused to give her the glucose test, she obviously is IR as it has such a quick beneficial effect on her. I don't know why vets don't just put horses that are struggling to recover from lami onto it as a matter of course.
Yes I know.
I am organising the vets to come here and show all my liveries how to check for pulse and what to look for in laminitis.
I think it would be good for all yard owners to arrange this. If I had done this sooner my horse of a lifetime would still be in my life
May we see a picture of your lovely girlie??
what a pretty girl she is, an unusual stripe on her face, very unique.
Hope you get to the bottom of the flare ups to avoid any more for her.
Hope Epona is looking out for her http://www.epona.net/:)
Wagtail bad luck you seem to having a right time of it ATM,
On straw I have this week given my haylage supplier to a bag of my chopped oat straw chaff to send for analysis , I will post if it brings up anything interesting.
yes expensive but cheap when it keeps her well, that cost is priceless26 a day and is also on prascend, but she's worth it.
Just a thought did you wean her off or just stop the metformin? I may have missed that bit but you may find she does not need 26 daily, once stable try gradually reducing there may be a safe level you can remain on without putting her at risk, my pony reduced his then stopped and has, touch wood, been laminitis free since, about 2 years now which considering one vet wanted to pts is remarkable although obviously management is crucial I am much more relaxed than I was and he has been able to cope with unsoaked hay this winter.
| am still grieving my girl.
I am going to a lami lecture at my vets and will start going to more and more clinics (free) to learn everything possible about this disease and others. I learnt a lot of the last year but want to learn more so I can see the microscopic symptoms.
Its so hard too- every day coping without her, as I am constantly reminded from her empty stable and also her sons depression. I might ask vets for bloods in case he has a virus or something. He is so lethargic moping in fields, when schooled he works well but out hacking he plods.
I wish you and your girly well waggy if I can be of any help please let me know.
I would spend what ever it takes for mine as you will your girlie,
yes expensive but cheap when it keeps her well, that cost is priceless![]()
Yes getting bloods would be a good idea. Does he have others in the field with him? I was wondering how much of his depression is missing his Mum as she was on box rest for so long and only out in the field with him at the end, wasn't he? Or is he stabled next to her too?