Rosie Round The Hills
Well-Known Member
Hello, I'd be very appreciative of your views on my mare. I'll try to be as brief as possible:-
I bought her February 2009, age 11, and ex-brood-mare. TB x suffolk punch. Came with no history of medical problems, albeit fat and unfit.
Spring 2009 she developed lumps in her skin (see description below) which went away with a course of steroids thus confirming it's an allergic reaction/over-reacting immune system problem.
In 2009 we 'treated' the symptoms with a fairly hefty dose of steroids a fair few times, whilst searching about for the cause - thought it might be the straw bedding, or the other horses food in the air. I put her on various herbal supplements and in Autumn the lumps disappeared so we thought we'd cured it!
In 2010 Spring they came back and we used steroids again, whilst still trying to find the solution - tried fencing off the hedges etc. Autumn came and the lumps went away again.
I took the advantage of winter coming - and the lumps going - to do a few 'trials'. All winter she was bedded on wheat straw, and fed on chopped grass, linseed, peas and speedibeet plus a herbal balancer. She had no lumps all winter.
In 2011 Spring guess what they came back. By this time I am very prepared and for five weeks she has been on wood pellets bed, and fed on only chopped grass, our pasture, and our hay. I am treating the lumps topically with fuciderm (steroid cream) which doesn't make them disappear but does prevent them bothering her too much.
The Lumps they can be pin pricks, they can be 'blobby' lumps, they first appear on her neck then can appear anywhere on her upper body, but their most common areas are:- saddle area, hip 'crease', top of her hind quarters. They do itch her (she loves being itched on them), but don't cause too much distress if I manage them with fuciderm.
Known Causes are barley, maize, psyllium, soya. I'm 99% certain that these are things she reacts to as I was able to trial them this winter.
Things I've eliminated as causes are - our hedges, wheat straw bedding, the hay my yard produces, fly bites.
My current theories (and there have been many of these over the last years!!) are:-
1 - it's something in the pasture that only grows in the warmer weather. A 'herb' that her immune system reacts to. The way to identify this would I think be a pasture analysis and intra-dermal skin testing. I'm not big on this plan because I haven't heard much to convince me that intra-dermal skin testing is very accurate.
2 - she can't cope with the level of protein in the spring and summer grass and it's an 'exaggerated' form of protein lumps. If it is this, then it's the immune system and the digestive system that need sorting - doable perhaps.
3 - the hormonal changes caused by her reproductive cycle is causing it, and it's nothing to do with feed or environment. If it's this, then perhaps it could be resolved through treating the reproductive problem?
Please please - if anyone has any area of expertise, particularly in (2) or (3), I'd be very appreciative of your views. Honestly, I'm at the point where I understand what's going on just as well as my vet who is great but doesn't have the expertise in the right area.
Thank You.
I bought her February 2009, age 11, and ex-brood-mare. TB x suffolk punch. Came with no history of medical problems, albeit fat and unfit.
Spring 2009 she developed lumps in her skin (see description below) which went away with a course of steroids thus confirming it's an allergic reaction/over-reacting immune system problem.
In 2009 we 'treated' the symptoms with a fairly hefty dose of steroids a fair few times, whilst searching about for the cause - thought it might be the straw bedding, or the other horses food in the air. I put her on various herbal supplements and in Autumn the lumps disappeared so we thought we'd cured it!
In 2010 Spring they came back and we used steroids again, whilst still trying to find the solution - tried fencing off the hedges etc. Autumn came and the lumps went away again.
I took the advantage of winter coming - and the lumps going - to do a few 'trials'. All winter she was bedded on wheat straw, and fed on chopped grass, linseed, peas and speedibeet plus a herbal balancer. She had no lumps all winter.
In 2011 Spring guess what they came back. By this time I am very prepared and for five weeks she has been on wood pellets bed, and fed on only chopped grass, our pasture, and our hay. I am treating the lumps topically with fuciderm (steroid cream) which doesn't make them disappear but does prevent them bothering her too much.
The Lumps they can be pin pricks, they can be 'blobby' lumps, they first appear on her neck then can appear anywhere on her upper body, but their most common areas are:- saddle area, hip 'crease', top of her hind quarters. They do itch her (she loves being itched on them), but don't cause too much distress if I manage them with fuciderm.
Known Causes are barley, maize, psyllium, soya. I'm 99% certain that these are things she reacts to as I was able to trial them this winter.
Things I've eliminated as causes are - our hedges, wheat straw bedding, the hay my yard produces, fly bites.
My current theories (and there have been many of these over the last years!!) are:-
1 - it's something in the pasture that only grows in the warmer weather. A 'herb' that her immune system reacts to. The way to identify this would I think be a pasture analysis and intra-dermal skin testing. I'm not big on this plan because I haven't heard much to convince me that intra-dermal skin testing is very accurate.
2 - she can't cope with the level of protein in the spring and summer grass and it's an 'exaggerated' form of protein lumps. If it is this, then it's the immune system and the digestive system that need sorting - doable perhaps.
3 - the hormonal changes caused by her reproductive cycle is causing it, and it's nothing to do with feed or environment. If it's this, then perhaps it could be resolved through treating the reproductive problem?
Please please - if anyone has any area of expertise, particularly in (2) or (3), I'd be very appreciative of your views. Honestly, I'm at the point where I understand what's going on just as well as my vet who is great but doesn't have the expertise in the right area.
Thank You.