MrsMozart
Just passing through...
As title.
Interested in what symptoms a horse would show if it had an ovarian cyst.
Interested in what symptoms a horse would show if it had an ovarian cyst.
As title.
Interested in what symptoms a horse would show if it had an ovarian cyst.
Gracie had the granulosa tumor and she hasn't been aggressive or stallionish to other mares, she has, however, become reluctant to jump and generally moody, inconsistent in her work and a tiny bit wappy.Thank you JG![]()
And thank you for the correction
. I've done some reading and am pleased to report that GM isn't showing any of the signs of a Granulosa Theca Cell tumour
We have narrowed her whappiness down to the sugarbeet! So that's on its way out. *now researching sugarbeet and all its variants!*
Anyone's guess - as mares don't get ovarian cysts!They DO get uterine cysts which are normally just a nuisance at pregnancy scanning time, although a lot of big ones can make a mare difficult to get in foal.
Where there is an enlarged ovary, there are several possible causes. One is a haemorrhagic follicle - it doesn't ovulate - it just sits there and gets bigger! They can be painful - and some mares will get them on almost every cycle (due to a hormonal deficit.) Most likely to cause reluctance to go forward under saddle, and possibly buckiung or rearing on mounting dependingf on how big/painful it is.
The other possibility is an ovarian tumour - in particular a Granulosa Theca Cell tumour. This sort of tumour is the most common of the ovarian tumours - and is benign - BUT it does produce testosterone so can lead to some VERY undesirable behaviours including mounting mares, attacking geldings (and people) etc. etc.
Our mare started showing very aggressive and concerning behaviour. She put her head through a window to try and attack her reflection, she was exceptionally nappy and her behaviour became very unpredictable in the stable too, to the point that you had to have her tied up and the door open for an easy escape. You could ride her through her tantrums and episodes but it took a lot of serious effort and she put Al on the floor so many times.
We spoke to the vet and essentially were told she was just being a badly brought up baby mare, and we needed to discipline her better. We ignored this and kept with the same approach, because we felt something was wrong. She then went lame behind, and then suddenly tied up very badly (absolutely couldn't move). We called a different practice, they came out and ran a series of blood tests and also gave us painkillers and sedatives for her to try and keep her calm and comfortable and she was a lot happier, which clarified there was something seriously wrong with her- bute wasn't touching it clearly (we'd bute trialled).
Tests came back and she had higher testosterone levels than you'd expect a stallion to have. She had enormous tumours on her ovaries and they required operations to remove asap. The operations would have been fairly major due to the size of the tumours, and the vet felt she wouldn't be suitable for more than happy hacking at best afterwards. We had her PTS the next day- she'd suffered so much in her life (broken leg, serious ulceration following poor practice from a vet dealing with a cut knee, colic) and she was losing her trust in people completely.