Deborahm
Well-Known Member
We had a pony foal born last night who has been running milk from his nostrils. The vet came this afternoon and said its most likely that the foal has a problem with its soft palate or a cleft palate.
Without taking the foal into be scoped a definite diagnosis couldn't be made, nor the extent of the problem. However the vet said that the prognosis probably was not good, as such foals usually get pneumonia from the milk going into the lungs causing infection. We have been given oral antibiotics from the vet, and the foal has had a tetanus jab.
We want to take the foal into the RVC to be scoped at the start of the week to find out the extent of the problem. As its a pony foal (not an expensive TB) realistically we are ruling out an operation to fix it if it does has a cleft palate, as we understand that costs around £5000, is a major op, and is no guarantee of a healthy outcome.
If it does turn out to have palate problems are we just delaying the inevitable and should this foal be put to sleep? Is there any chance of a normal life for a small child's pony that has a minor palate deformity? How high maintenance are horses with palate problems? Any advice welcomed, as the foal is actually a real sweetie and stunning. It will be heartbreaking to euthanize it, but would that be the kindest decision?
Without taking the foal into be scoped a definite diagnosis couldn't be made, nor the extent of the problem. However the vet said that the prognosis probably was not good, as such foals usually get pneumonia from the milk going into the lungs causing infection. We have been given oral antibiotics from the vet, and the foal has had a tetanus jab.
We want to take the foal into the RVC to be scoped at the start of the week to find out the extent of the problem. As its a pony foal (not an expensive TB) realistically we are ruling out an operation to fix it if it does has a cleft palate, as we understand that costs around £5000, is a major op, and is no guarantee of a healthy outcome.
If it does turn out to have palate problems are we just delaying the inevitable and should this foal be put to sleep? Is there any chance of a normal life for a small child's pony that has a minor palate deformity? How high maintenance are horses with palate problems? Any advice welcomed, as the foal is actually a real sweetie and stunning. It will be heartbreaking to euthanize it, but would that be the kindest decision?