EstherYoung
Well-Known Member
My head hurts.....
But from one Esther to another, I can confirm that we strongly suspect that our old TB who we lost last year had ragwort induced liver problems. However, we never got him biopsied and he didn't have a PM, as our vet was happy to take the pragmatic approach of 'if it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck.....'. We didn't see the point in putting an old boy through an invasive procedure when the blood test showed his liver was kaputt and it wasn't going to change the way we treated him. Our old boy therefore won't appear on any stats and, as I would strongly suggest that we're not alone in not getting a biopsy or a PM on a liver damaged horse, neither will many others.
He was a tough old booger though, as although he was never cured, he pulled back from the acute attack and lived another four years before we called it a day. Although his liver problems weren't entirely responsible for the decision to call it a day, they were a heavily weighted factor as it meant that treatment options for his other conditions were limited.
But from one Esther to another, I can confirm that we strongly suspect that our old TB who we lost last year had ragwort induced liver problems. However, we never got him biopsied and he didn't have a PM, as our vet was happy to take the pragmatic approach of 'if it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck.....'. We didn't see the point in putting an old boy through an invasive procedure when the blood test showed his liver was kaputt and it wasn't going to change the way we treated him. Our old boy therefore won't appear on any stats and, as I would strongly suggest that we're not alone in not getting a biopsy or a PM on a liver damaged horse, neither will many others.
He was a tough old booger though, as although he was never cured, he pulled back from the acute attack and lived another four years before we called it a day. Although his liver problems weren't entirely responsible for the decision to call it a day, they were a heavily weighted factor as it meant that treatment options for his other conditions were limited.