My horse is smaking her head against the wall?

ConneyPearce

New User
Joined
30 January 2013
Messages
2
Visit site
We have had a mare 3 or 4 months now and has been good as gold. But she has recently having to be stabled over night as she is not getting on with the other mares. But the last couple of weeks she has been acting very out of character and hitting her own head against the walls? Does anyone know why she may be doing this or seen this before?
 
Sounds like extreme stress to me too - the only other one I knew who did that had colic, and died within a few hours. Hope you can get to the bottom of it
 
Liver damage can cause them to bash their heads against walls. I would get the vet asap and get some bloods run.
 
My mare resorted to this after 3 months of vets missing her broken tooth that had an infected and exposed nerve. Talk about the poor thing SHOUTING but no one was listening! I was listening, I just didn't know what was wrong with her! :-(
 
But the last couple of weeks she has been acting very out of character and hitting her own head against the walls?

Last couple of weeks! Why on earth haven't you phoned the vet yet?

If your child was banging it's head against a brick wall I think you would find out what was wrong a bit sooner.

Sounds like a very unhappy/ill horse.
 
Liver damage can cause them to bash their heads against walls. I would get the vet asap and get some bloods run.

This they tested my lad for gutteral pouch and liver issues when he had nosebleeds last year before he died. During the diagnostic visit they talked me thru the signs for liver damage and this was one of the things they mentioned - his issue was a tumour unrelated.
 
Liver damage tends to be more head pressing against the wall rather than banging. The horse would be dead by now if it had liver damage to that degree for a few weeks!
 
I know of one that did this due to a strangles swelling in the inner ear. Self mutilation like this can be behavioural (extreme stress) or toxicity (liver disease). Please take it very seriously.
 
Knottinbelt the Vet from Liverpool University did a lecture on this at the 2012 Equine forum you should pick it up from their website not good news.
 
I can't believe it when people don't immediately get the vet for something such as this. :confused:

OP you say in the title 'my horse', but then that it isn't your horse? Please let us know what the outcome is for this poor mare. :(
 
i am the only one suspecting this could be a troll post? OP has only just joined HHO, this is their first post. first they say "my horse" but now its actually grans horse?

my apologies to OP if not a troll post..
 
Top