Box_Of_Frogs
Well-Known Member
There have been many posts regarding sore eyes over the last few weeks. Please, please, please everyone who notices eye problems in their horse - however apparently minor - get the vet out. Eyes are too precious and fragile to leave to chance. I've posted on this many, many times but feel so strongly about it that I'm going to do it again. Because of the horrendous problems my Sunny had with chronic conjunctivitis that his previous owners didn't ever bother to treat properly, he eventually had to have one eye surgically removed. The remaining eye is a constant worry, as I'm sure you understand. During the course of trying to understand what had happened, what went wrong, what Sunny's body was doing and some of the truly nightmare pitfalls along the way, I am now a bit of a lay "expert" on eyes. Some very basic dos and dont's now, and please folks, I'm not trying to preach, just save other horses' eyes. List in no particular order. Don't try to treat it yourself unless it's very, very superficial. Don't rely on cold tea: this may sooth but it won't clear up a bacterial, viral or fungal infection. Don't let ANY condition get chronic. Don't put medication in your horse's eye that was prescribed for a different animal or pet. Proprietary soothing stuff for people eg Optrex etc can be SOOTHING for horses too but, again, they won't clear up a true infection. Whenever you put anything in your horse's eye you risk damaging it further by scratching the cornea or puncturing the eyeball itself with the end of the container the stuff comes in. If at all possible (not so easy with watery drops) apply creams to the clean end of your finger and then squash your finger in the eye. Sunny finally lost his battle after the yard staff stabbed him in the eye with the pointy end of the very cream that was being used to try to save the eye. Plain boiled and cooled water is best for wiping round the outside of the eye. All the following need the vet immediately: lumps, bumps, puffiness, swelling, sticky gunge, bloodshot, horse hiding from the light, excessive weeping (especially to the extent that the whole side of the horse's face is black with tears), blue tinge on the cornea, blood vessels growing across the cornea, milky white patches on the cornea, half closed sore eyes. This list is NOT exhaustive, just a guide. Sunny's 6-month battle cost £4,000 and he still lost an eye. His remaining eye isn't in good condition. Please be vigilant all. Gonna post this as a fresh post in Vets x