Morgan123
Well-Known Member
Ive got a vet phoning me back for advice on this, but in the meanwhile need some good old HHO advice
would you be worried about the following? Ill keep it as concise as possible but sorry if that's not very...!
Im on a large-ish yard (around 30 horses plus 20 or so polo ponies which just arrived to winter with us out the back); the horses are split into fields of around 5 and can sniff neighbouring fields over the fence. Around a month/6 weeks ago, a few horses including mine had a bit of a winter bug coughing, very lethargic, bit low. Sorted after a week or two of rest, no problem, not a big deal.
More recently (past 7 days) the following has happened:
Horse a) put down due to twisted gut from colicking
Horse b) The following day, one horse getting low grade colic which developed overnight not awful but bad enough for buscopan etc. Gradually subsided. Hes now on antibiotics for suspected peritonitis (unconfirmed, no blood tests done). Better, but still a bit low.
Horse c) One other horse has low grade colic a few nights this week.
A few weeks ago, several other horses, whove showed no other signs of anything (colic or lethargy) posturing to wee but not actually weeing, which seems from ym reading to be a symptom of peritonitis?!
Peritonitis was mentioned with the first horse too, though not sure why specifically. The vet thinks horse b has peritonitis caused by a bacterial infection, but hasnt been worried to hear about horse c or recommended blood tests or antibiotics for horse c. All the horses on the yard are eating the same hay, including two very, very ancient ones whove had none of the above symptoms. Horses b and c are in the same field and owned by the same person, and their owner bought brand new food this week just in case it was a bad bag of feed she had or something.
My horse is in the same field as horses b and c. Im due to go to a fun ride on Sunday, and I have to share transport with another horse from another yard. My horse has had whatever was going round and is recovered. Would you think I would need to be worried about an infection risk?
Im kind of thinking about this like as if its a tummy bug going round the office; youre not infectious once its over but then again, you could still transmit it to others couldnt you?
Urrr that wasnt that consise!!! What would you do?! Not go without a blood test??? I know my horse is fine, I'm just worried about spreading anything that's going round?
Im on a large-ish yard (around 30 horses plus 20 or so polo ponies which just arrived to winter with us out the back); the horses are split into fields of around 5 and can sniff neighbouring fields over the fence. Around a month/6 weeks ago, a few horses including mine had a bit of a winter bug coughing, very lethargic, bit low. Sorted after a week or two of rest, no problem, not a big deal.
More recently (past 7 days) the following has happened:
Horse a) put down due to twisted gut from colicking
Horse b) The following day, one horse getting low grade colic which developed overnight not awful but bad enough for buscopan etc. Gradually subsided. Hes now on antibiotics for suspected peritonitis (unconfirmed, no blood tests done). Better, but still a bit low.
Horse c) One other horse has low grade colic a few nights this week.
A few weeks ago, several other horses, whove showed no other signs of anything (colic or lethargy) posturing to wee but not actually weeing, which seems from ym reading to be a symptom of peritonitis?!
Peritonitis was mentioned with the first horse too, though not sure why specifically. The vet thinks horse b has peritonitis caused by a bacterial infection, but hasnt been worried to hear about horse c or recommended blood tests or antibiotics for horse c. All the horses on the yard are eating the same hay, including two very, very ancient ones whove had none of the above symptoms. Horses b and c are in the same field and owned by the same person, and their owner bought brand new food this week just in case it was a bad bag of feed she had or something.
My horse is in the same field as horses b and c. Im due to go to a fun ride on Sunday, and I have to share transport with another horse from another yard. My horse has had whatever was going round and is recovered. Would you think I would need to be worried about an infection risk?
Im kind of thinking about this like as if its a tummy bug going round the office; youre not infectious once its over but then again, you could still transmit it to others couldnt you?
Urrr that wasnt that consise!!! What would you do?! Not go without a blood test??? I know my horse is fine, I'm just worried about spreading anything that's going round?