Breeding and Genetics

Breeding and Genetics

Tuesdays with Tony

   I hope everybody enjoyed one of my most popular annual Come See Tony events last week: the Breeding Seminar! I was honored to be joined by the team from Etalon Diagnostics who explained genetic testing for everything from color to heritable diseases to athletic ability. Did you know that by just pulling 30-40 mane or tail hairs and submitting them to Etalon, you can test your horse for 15 color traits, and over 15 genetic diseases for just $99? That’s amazing! If I were breeding a horse this year, I would definitely start with a DNA MiniPanel from Etalon.

Getting your mare ready

      In addition to genetic testing to ensure you aren’t perpetuating any known heritable diseases, there are several more hurdles to clear before getting on with the businesses of making your own customized baby horse. At Springhill Equine, we have all of these tests and procedures rolled into an easy, convenient Pre-Breeding Soundness Exam.
Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic
     This comprehensive evaluation includes an ultrasound to determine if your mare’s reproductive system is anatomically normal and whether or not she is cycling. One new thing I learned last week is that mares are seasonal ovulators. This means that during the winter they stop cycling and go into a phase called seasonal anestrus. The pre-breeding ultrasound is also an excellent opportunity to map the uterus for cysts, which could cause problems down the road.
     In addition to an ultrasound, it is standard to perform a culture and cytology of the uterus, looking for signs of inflammation or infection within the uterus. Here at Springhill, we use the latest technology including a cytology brush and a low-volume uterine lavage culture to make sure we get the most complete sample possible of your mare’s uterus.
    The final piece of the Pre-Breeding Soundness Exam is the uterine biopsy. This procedure involves taking a tissue sample from the uterine lining and submitting it for microscopic evaluation by a theriogenologist. Another tidbit I learned last week: theriogenologists are veterinarians who specialize in reproduction! This uterine biopsy will tell us if the mare has any fibrosis, or scar tissue, within her uterus that could interfere with conceiving and carrying a foal to term.

Getting your mare in foal

    When it comes time to breed, it’s important to start with a healthy broodmare. Healthy means in good body condition, pasture sound, and ideally, young. The older the mare, the lower her conception rates. Mares over 8 years old have about a 33% per cycle conception rate, and mares over 18 drop to about a 2% per cycle conception rate. This translates into a lot more money and time invested in unsuccessful breeding attempts when dealing with a mare who is past her breeding prime.
     Once the perfect mare is chosen, she has passed her Pre-Breeding Soundness Exam with flying colors, and she is healthy as, well, a horse, it’s time to breed her. Using daily ultrasounds, the docs will monitor your mare as she grows and then ovulates a dominant ovarian follicle. They will time her insemination as close to ovulation as possible. Since sperm only survive about 24-48 hours in the oviducts, this precise timing is essential.
     After ovulation and insemination, the docs will want to monitor your mare for the development of PMIE, or Persistent Mating Induced Endometritis. This is another great design flaw of horses if you ask me: some mares will have almost an allergic reaction to semen and seminal fluid. Their uterus fills with fluid and inflammatory cells, which is not a happy environment for a growing embryo. But don’t worry! Our docs have dealt with this issue more times than they can count, and they have several remedies and tricks up their sleeve to get the uterus back in working order before baby comes to settle in.

Maintaining the pregnancy

   Once your mare has been bred, it is very important to keep up with her ultrasounds and vaccinations to ensure delivery of a healthy baby. This is the easy part, but it is no less essential. Most importantly, you must  have an ultrasound performed at 14 days of gestation- not 16 days, not 18 days. The 14 day check serves to both confirm the pregnancy, and to check for twins. One more handy Tony tidbit for your tool belt: twin pregnancies in horses almost always result in 0 live foals. Our only chance to reduce a twin pregnancy to a single embryo is at that 14 day check. So whatever you do, don’t push back that appointment! We also recommend ultrasound at 1 month, 2 months, 3 months, and 7 months of gestation. The 7 month ultrasound is primarily to check for placentitis, which if left  untreated will likely result in abortion or stillbirth.
    The only other appointments you need to remember are those for your mare’s rhinopneumonitis, aka Pneumabort, vaccines. These vaccines are due at 3, 5, 7, and 9 months of gestation. Piece of cake, right?
Remember, if you follow these simple instructions, you should be rewarded at the end of 11-12 long months of waiting. Seeing your foal being born will make all the hassle and worry worth it!
     Happy Breeding Season!
                      -Tony
P.S. The BloodMobile also showed up to my event, but they wouldn’t let me donate! Some ridiculous thing about “wrong species.” They’ll be receiving a very strongly worded letter in the mail. Nonetheless, thank you to everyone who was able to donate on Thursday. You are awesome!
P.P.S. Want more info on breeding? You can search my past blogs by clicking on the magnifying glass up top, and you can also listen to a podcast that my docs did on this topic! Just go to SpringhillEquine.com/podcast and scroll down the list.

Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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Joint Infections

Joint Infections

Tuesdays with Tony

Many of you have followed the story of Highway. He fell off a trailer on the interstate, then was unclaimed by owners. The Alachua County Sheriff’s Office, my amazing Docs, Equine Medical Center, and a whole lot of people via GoFundMe got him through the first few weeks of a very severe injury. My Docs were feeling pretty good about Highway’s future, despite the severity of his wounds, and it was time for him to spend his days healing, and being loved. The great people at Dreamcatcher Ranch and Rescue agreed to give Highway a great home. If only Highway’s injuries had felt the same.

 

What’s in a joint?

 

I’m going to start by talking a bit about how joints are put together. This description works for most of the joints in the body. It also applies to cats, humans, horses, even dogs (I try not to discuss those loud, smelly creatures). The joint is basically a balloon that encloses the spot where two bones meet. That balloon is called a joint capsule. That capsule is lined with stuff called synovium. Dr. Lacher describes this as really bad 1970’s shag carpeting. I’m not old enough to have seen this in person, but it seems like really fuzzy carpeting. There are also the cartilage-covered ends of the bones inside the joint. Just outside the joint capsule there are lots of tendons and ligaments. To make things slightly complicated, this same balloon setup is also around some tendons without the bone part of things.

 

Joints and bacteria don’t like each other

 

In Highway’s case the joint capsule got torn when he slid down the interstate on his knees. Not only did he open his joint capsule, but he also got tons of debris, including asphalt into his knee joints! I’m no expert. Ok that’s a lie. As a cat, I’m expert in all things, but I digress. I doubt asphalt and knees go together well. The asphalt helped carry bacteria deep into the joint. Once in the joint (his middle carpal joint, to be specific), bacteria go to town in all that shag carpeting wannabe synovium stuff. Synovium provides a warm, snuggly place to cuddle up and make more bacteria. And if anyone has ever tried to clean shag carpeting, you understand how hard it is to get the bacteria out of all those nooks and crannies! While that bacteria is hanging out in the joint, the body is fighting to get it out as hard as it can. Unfortunately, that process is incredibly bad for the cartilage on the bones, and the joint capsule itself.

 

Get out, bacteria! Get out!!

 

Bacteria are bad, and they’re hard to get out a joint, so what’s a Doc to do? The first step was establishing that Highway had in fact opened the joint capsule. To do that, Dr. Vurgason cleaned the area around the joint really well. She also clipped all the hair away from the wounds. Then she put a needle into the joint from another location as far away from the wound as possible. This needle was attached to a bag of sterile fluids. Pressure was applied to bag, and the wounds watched closely. Nearly as soon as fluids started to flow through the needle, Dr. Vurgason could see the fluid coming out of the wound opening. This meant the joint was definitely compromised. To try to get as much bacteria out as possible at this stage, Dr. Vurgason ran the entire bag of fluids (1,000cc) through the joint, and finished up with some antibiotics. This was Step 1.

You guys are the reason Highway got to go to Step 2! A little bit of fluid was OK, but with a joint this open, and with this much stuff in it, Highway needed lots of fluid through that joint. And that means surgery. You awesome humans (wow, I don’t say that very often) stepped up, and off to Equine Medical Center of Ocala he went. While there, they put a camera and very, very big needle into the joint, and ran about 10,000cc of fluid through his joint. They also picked out as much asphalt as they could find.

 

After surgery  

 

To keep up the fight, Highway had high concentrations of antibiotics placed directly in the joint, along with daily regional perfusions of antibiotics. Regional perfusions work to increase the antibiotics to one specific area of the body. To do them, a tourniquet was placed above the wounds on Highway’s right front leg. Then antibiotics were injected into a vein. The tourniquet was left in place for 20 minutes, then removed. Highway also got IV antibiotics, and some bute for pain. His bandage was replaced every day with a new sterile bandage. This helped minimize the amount of bacteria near the joint. Most importantly, Highway stayed very, very comfortable. Horses can’t bear all their weight on just one front leg for very long without developing founder in the other one. Thankfully, Highway was never terribly uncomfortable, so the Docs didn’t have to worry about this.

 

Fighting and Hoping

 

Highway did great! The flushing, regional perfusions, and antibiotics, and a whole lot of fight from Highway himself seemed to do the trick. The knee joint closed, and still Highway was comfortable. If there had been a raging infection still going on in there, he would have been really painful as the immune system kept up the fight. My Docs gave him ten days off antibiotics, and two and a half weeks after the joint closed to be sure things were looking good. Then it was time to send him to Dreamcatcher, where he could get the long-term care he would need to heal. Horses being horses, it couldn’t be that easy. It turns out there was a simmering infection in the extensor tendon sheath, which is one of those joint-type things around a tendon. This one is located right over the knee joint.

This one still had bacteria, and even some tiny bits of asphalt in it. You see, even with all those fluids used to rinse the wound and joint the first time, it’s pretty much impossible to get it completely clean (think about that shag carpeting), but Highway’s body had been working hard to get that asphalt out. The tiny cells of the immune system had encapsulated it, and brought it to the surface of the wound to get it out of the body.

Highway has been back through the lavage, regional perfusion, bandage routine again with the Docs at Peterson and Smith Equine Hospital. He’s back fighting to clean the bacteria out of the joint, and trust me, it’s a fight. The bacteria have been in there since November 30th in the wee hours of the morning, when Highway decided he wasn’t going to stay in that horse trailer to face certain death. The bacteria have had time to get into all those nooks and crannies. They’ve withstood lavaging, regional perfusions, and antibiotics. It’s going to be harder to get them to leave now. But the Docs are fighting, Highway is comfortable, and you guys are supporting him through it! You humans are amazing sometimes! That’s high praise coming from a cat!!

 

Want to learn more about Highway? Or follow his story? My minions post regular updates on the Springhill Equine Facebook Page.

 

Want even more great info? Listen to the podcast the humans do: Straight from the Horse Doctor’s Mouth. The latest episode is all about deworming protocols, and you might not be as up to date with this as you think you are!

Want to be my favorite human? Subscribe to my blog. Get it a day earlier than everyone else, and be an official member of the Tony fan club.

Until next week,

Tony

Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic

Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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Tony’s New Year’s Resolutions

Tony’s New Year’s Resolutions

Tuesdays with Tony

     Happy New Year everyone! It’s that time of year again for me to help you with your New Year’s Resolutions. But don’t worry, my resolutions are way easier than trying to go to the gym every day or stick to the Keto diet. These resolutions are sure to make for a happy horse and an even happier horse mom or dad!

Sign up for a Wellness Plan

Yes, I know this is on my list every year. But that’s because it’s really, really important! All of Springhill’s Wellness packages go by calendar year, so now is the time to renew your horses for 2019. Also, if you are interested in our convenient monthly payment option, your horses MUST be signed up be January 15th to be eligible.

Do you remember all the perks that come along with your annual Wellness package? Two visits a year including all necessary vaccines, physical exams, Coggins, and fecal egg counts, plus an annual dental float with sedation included. NO EMERGENCY FEES for the entire year for any horses on a Wellness plan. Not to mention you get a really cute and clever T-shirt when you sign up (while supplies last)! While having your horse on Wellness is a huge money saver, the docs tell me that the true value of our Wellness packages lies in the bi-annual exams and the oral exam with every dental float. By having your vet give your horse a thorough once-over at least every 6 months, problems are identified early and can be treated before they become a major concern.

We offer 3 tiers of wellness plans so you can choose the one that best suits your horse’s needs. The Performance plan is ideal for anyone planning to compete or travel regularly in the year ahead. This plan includes a third visit to make sure your horse’s immunity against contagious diseases is kept in high gear. A third exam by one of our veterinarians also offers another opportunity for issues such as mild lameness, skin problems, or weight loss to be corrected before it derails your competition plans.

The Weekend Warrior plan is great for horses that mostly stay at home, but that plan on occasionally traveling to horse shows, barrel races, trail rides, or anywhere else they may come in contact with other horses. This plan includes vaccination against flu and rhinopneumonitis, the most common contagious upper respiratory diseases of horses.

The Pasture Pet plan is designed for the homebodies who spend their days mowing the grass and generally looking adorable. They may be riding horses that never leave the farm, or pets whose main purpose is being a cute pasture ornament. It’s still important to keep these guys healthy and protected against diseases that can be transmitted by mosquitoes and wildlife.

Once you have picked the plan that’s right for you, there are 3 super-easy ways to sign up. You can sign up online either on your phone or computer, in person at the office or during a vet visit, or by mail. If your horse had a 2018 Wellness plan, just call the office and tell my minions you would like to renew it for 2019. Easy as pie! Wait, what makes pie easy? Easy as catching a toy mouse!

Attend all of my Seminars

Did you know that I hold seminars here at the clinic just about every month? These are free opportunities for you to come and learn something new about your horse, or horses in general. Topics range from breeding, to feet, to senior care, to vaccines, to you name it! Seriously, if you have an idea for a seminar topic that you would be interested in, make sure to let one of my peeps know. Certain topics will be brought back by popular demand, but we are always open to new ideas.

Dr. Lacher, Dr. Vurgason, and Dr. Abbott are full of useful information, and we love to pick their brains. Nonetheless, we often bring in guest speakers for our seminars to hear their valued input on their areas of expertise. We recently had Dr. Samantha Brooks speak on the topic of equine genetics, and we will have Etalon diagnostics joining us for our Breeding Seminar on January 10th!

My monthly seminars are always free and open to the public. They are usually held here at the clinic on Thursday nights. The best way to find out about our upcoming seminars and other events is through our Facebook page, so make sure you ‘like’ and ‘follow’ Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic. Committing to stop by once a month for a great educational opportunity is an easy resolution to keep for 2019!

Listen to my Podcast

 One of my 2018 resolutions was to start recording a Podcast, aptly named Straight from the Horse Doctor’s Mouth. After all, my goal is to make the world a better place for horses. Well, that resolution was a success, so now you reap the benefit of listening to Dr. Lacher, Justin Long, and various guest speakers talk about numerous topics of interest to horse people! Topics thus far have included donkeys, flies, boots, ulcers, allergies, lameness, eyes, fat horses, vaccines, and many more. Again, if you have a suggestion for a podcast topic, feel free to pass it on to one of my little helpers!

Podcasts are a fun avenue for spreading horse knowledge around the world. You can listen to them anytime, anywhere, on your phone, at home, in the car on a road trip… you choose! Just download Straight from the Horse Doctor’s Mouth, or listen on our website. If you stick to this New Year’s Resolution, you will learn more than you ever knew you didn’t know about horses!

Well, Happy New Year to all my followers and friends! I hope 2019 brings you peace, joy, and of course, horses.


-Tony

Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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Is He Lame or just Bad?

Is He Lame or just Bad?

Tuesdays with Tony

There’s a superwoman out there many of you may never have heard of. Her name is Dr. Sue Dyson. She’s from England, works at a place called the Animal Health Trust, and does some fantastic research on horses. My Docs definitely have a huge nerd crush on her! Why do I bring her up this week? Dr. Dyson recently published two very interesting research papers about horses, rider weight, saddles, behavior, and lameness.

 

Weight vs Height

I’m as sensitive as anyone about weight, but this is an important topic for riders. I only have to ensure the counter is sturdy enough to hold me for my daily nap. Dr. Dyson performed a small study looking at rider weight and height, and how it affected horse’s backs. They had riders of all different weights and heights, and body mass index (BMI). This means two riders who weighed the same amount might have very different body types. Turns out that’s pretty important.

 

Measuring Stuff

Dr. Dyson measured the horse’s backs very precisely before and after riding. In what would be considered normal horses, with petite riders (she made sure weight wasn’t an issue at all with this group) the back normally widens immediately after riding. To be sure the saddle itself wasn’t the problem, Dr. Dyson had master saddlers on hand checking everything. Dr. Dyson doesn’t leave anything to chance! Once they were happy with the study design, they began testing the different riders.

 

The first issue they found was that taller, heavier riders need to be very, very sure their saddle fits well. They found this group tended to hit the back of the saddle harder than shorter, heavier riders. Hitting the back of the saddle caused pressure to be transferred through the tree in inappropriate ways. When the backs of this group of horses were measured, they found they got narrower! This was caused by muscle spasms. Next they found the horses ridden by riders greater than about 15% of the horse’s body weight caused temporary lameness. (A rider at 150 lbs with a 1,000 lbs horse would be at 15%) Dr. Dyson was very clear that this was a small study, and a whole lot more work needs to be done. Dr. Dyson also said lots of horse factors are important. Things such as how long the back is, how fit the horse is, and how well does the saddle fit are some of the factors she thinks are important. I have no doubt Dr. Dyson is continuing to work on this issue!

 

Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic

Is he lame or just bad?

It’s a question I hear all the time from my countertop. It can be incredibly difficult to decide if there’s pain somewhere, or if a horse is misbehaving. Horses make it even harder as prey animals. They have millions of years of genetic programming telling them to hide pain. Cats do this too, but it’s mostly because we have an image to protect, not because we’re worried someone is going to eat us. Dr. Dyson observed certain behaviors of horses during her lameness exams that resolved when the pain stopped. She put her research skills to work and came up with a study to look at behavior and lameness.

 

Dr. Dyson found that veterinarians were able to identify behaviors that signaled a lameness was present. However, she also found that many trainers and riders weren’t able to identify those behaviors. Dr. Dyson created a training program with pictures and descriptions of lameness-associated behaviors. After learning about the behaviors, these riders and trainers were pretty darn good at spotting them. Even more important, when the problem area was fixed, the behaviors went away. The hard part for many of these lamenesses was finding the problem area. But that’s a whole ‘nother blog. For now, know that your horse just might be hurting, and not being a jerk for the fun of it. That’s much more of a cat thing to do, anyway.

I realize the holiday you humans call Christmas is nearly upon us. Let Dr. Dyson’s first study be a reminder to go easy on the eggnog and cookies!

Until next week,

-Tony

P.S. Are you driving to visit loved ones for Christmas? Make sure you leave your veterinarian’s phone number in your barn, just in case something happens while you’re gone. And a good podcast can make road trips fun! Subscribe to Straight from the Horse Doctor’s Mouth, and show up to Christmas dinner with some new horse knowledge!

Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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Trailer Safety

Trailer Safety

Tuesdays with Tony

You may have heard the story of the horse we named “Highway” who was found on I-75 on Friday and treated here at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic for his wounds. It turns out that he fell out of a moving horse trailer. So, I thought now might be a good opportunity to tell you all my Tony Trailer Tips!

Check Your Trailer


The most important thing, whether you are planning on hauling a horse around the country or around the corner, is to make sure your trailer is in good working order. Most trailers are made out of a combination of metal, wood, or fiberglass. The problem is, metal can rust, wood can rot, and fiberglass can crack. Start with the floorboards, making sure there are no soft or weak spots where a horse’s foot could fall through. If you have floor mats, remember to pull them up regularly and check underneath.


Next, be sure to check your door latches and hinges for any pieces that may be rusty, loose, or missing. As a cat who works at a vet clinic, I see way too many lacerations sustained on horse trailers. So, for my sake, please also check the interior of your trailer for nails or other sharp things that your horse could find to hurt himself on.


Check your trailer brakes, as well as brake lights and turn signals before heading out. There could easily be a short in the wiring even if you just drove it yesterday. I see so many trailers come through the clinic with the lights not working. Why would you put the thing you care about the most in a trailer with no brake lights or turn signals? That’s just begging to get rear-ended, and that never ends well for the horse.

Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic


It’s always good to do a “circle of safety” just before driving away with your trailer. A circle of safety is where starting at the driver’s side door, you walk ALL the way around your truck + trailer until you return to that door, looking for anything amiss. Make sure you kick every tire, and make sure your spare is still inflated. Under-inflated tires are the number 1 reason for blowouts, and blowouts are the number 1 reason for trailers flipping over.

Don’t tie your horse


This is a controversial Tony Tip, but hear me out. If (God forbid) you were in a trailer accident, and the trailer flipped or rolled, would you want your horse to be attached to the trailer? What if the trailer landed sideways or upside down? Also, having your horse’s head attached to the trailer and unable to move freely in the event of an accident could place extreme torque on your horse’s neck. We don’t want that.


Another reason our docs recommend NOT tying your horse is to prevent shipping fever. Especially on a long trip, leaving a horse’s head untied allows them to lower their head to the ground to clear their nostrils of dirt, mucus, and germs. Tying your horse prevents this very normal behavior, resulting in several snotty, sick horses at the end of a long haul.


Leaving your horse untied in the trailer can’t 100% prevent “shipping fever,” because you still have the unfortunate combination of new bacteria combined with the stress of hauling. However, in our docs’ experience, it can greatly reduce the incidence.


If you must tie your horse (i.e. to prevent him from turning around in the trailer, or to stop him from bothering another horse you are hauling) always use a breakaway halter. Breakaway halters, as the name implies, are made of something that will break if enough pressure is applied. They are usually leather or have a strip of leather over the poll. The idea is that this leather strap will break before the horse’s neck in the event of an accident.

A word about loading


You seasoned equestrians will already know this, but consider it a refresher! You always want to load the heavier horse on the driver’s side. If you’re only hauling one horse, make sure he is on this “high side” of the trailer. The reason behind this has to do with the pitch, or slant, of the road. When paved, the road is actually taller in the middle than at the shoulder. If you were to put the heavier load on the passenger side, the combination of the pitch of the road and the uneven weight would cause the trailer to pull hard to the right.

Think safety first


When driving your trailer, practice defensive driving at all times. It seems today fewer and fewer people on the road understand trailer safety, so you have to be extra cautious. Give yourself more than enough stopping distance. Take turns slow and wide. Leave extra time and don’t speed. And my personal favorite: don’t pull in anywhere you aren’t sure you can get your trailer out of!


At rest stops, check your horse to make sure everything is hunky-dory. Remember to offer your horse water when you stop, to prevent colic on a long trip.

I could keep giving you Tony Trailer Tips all day, but a cat’s gotta nap. I think the most important thing to remember at all times is that you have some very precious cargo onboard! No one would ever choose to let their horse get injured rather than have their trailer fixed, right? Right?

Safe Travels to you and your horses!

     ~ Tony

P.S. After you subscribe to my blog, which gets it to you by email a day earlier than the Facebook masses get it, why don’t you try out the Springhill Equine podcast? It’s called Straight from the Horse Doctor’s Mouth, and each episode is packed with way more info than I could ever stay awake long enough to write down for you in my amazing blog. It’s free, and you can listen to it right from your phone while you’re doing human stuff. Trust me, it will change your life. Well, probably.

Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic

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Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

Should I Breed My Horse?

Should I Breed My Horse?

Tuesdays with Tony

As a cat, one of my many, many tasks is to humble humans daily. With breeding season coming up, I feel it’s my duty to have a heart-to-heart with you about what breeding actually means. I have come to this subject today because our 10th Annual Castration Clinic (where Springhill Equine has a ball… or two) is coming up soon. It’s important when thinking about your horse as a stallion, that good stallions make great geldings! Anyway, moving on to the topic at hand.

 

Should you?

 

Got a mare? Got a stallion? Make a baby. Sell the baby. It’ll be great.

Let’s start with the mare. I hear from humans all the time that they have a great horse, and they’re not wrong. However, look at your mare with a critical eye to determine if she should be bred. Sure, she does what you love doing, and she does it well (if she doesn’t, why would you breed her?), but do you want to pass on her conformation? Does she have personality quirks you have come to love, but would never, ever want in a horse you were looking at to buy? For many breeds, you should also have genetic testing done to see if she carries things like PSSM, OLWS, or other potentially life-threatening genes. If she does, you really want to make breeding decisions carefully. Need help deciding if you should breed your mare? Talk to someone you trust in your discipline. [This person should not own a stallion you may breed your mare to.]

For stallions, I have two words: perfect and money. If you’re going to keep your horse a stallion, he should have it all.  He should have the conformation your discipline is looking for, the personality, bloodlines, genetic testing, and a track record. That last part is the beginning of the money. If you don’t have the funds to campaign a stallion so that he can prove his value in your discipline, geld him. And after you campaign him, if you don’t have the funds to promote him, and his offspring, geld him. The sad truth is no one will promote your stallion and his offspring like you do. Don’t expect others to do that for you. This means advertisements, stallion auctions, showing babies, training fees for those babies. All of it. This often means stallions don’t even begin to pay for themselves for 10 to 15 years! All things to think about before leaving those testicles on.

 

But….

 

Your mare is amazing, so is your stallion. Let’s make a baby! Whoa, whoa, whoa! I have siblings. Maybe some of you humans have siblings, too. I don’t know about your family, but I’m the only one to turn out decent in my family. I have a job, a blog, a warm lap to sleep on, and minions to deliver me food and beverages. Just because you have genetic potential, doesn’t mean the kid is going to get those good genes. It’s still a roll of the dice. Do you have a plan for those 1D barrel horses you cross, and end up with a something that couldn’t win the 7D if that was a division? A better question is, do you have a plan for getting this foal raised and trained to its potential? This can work out well if you can do all the training, but if you need to send baby off for lots of training, or you do a discipline that takes years to master (I’m talking to you, Dressage), it can add up to a lot of dollars!

Eyes wide open

 

I’m not saying don’t breed your horse, I’m just reminding you to think about the entire process. I’m also going to ask that you visit a local horse rescue, and talk with them about the horses they have. Someone bred every one of those horses.

And now I’m off to prepare for the Castration Clinic. This year’s motto is Geldings: Ball-less and Flawless!

Until next week,

Tony

P.S. I’m sure that by now you’ve subscribed to my blog, so I’ll skip that part. Have you tried out the podcast that the humans do yet? It’s called Straight From the Horse Doctor’s Mouth, and it’s a half hour of amazing, free information about horse stuff that you can listen to while you drive, while you wash your horse, while you jog (you humans and your crazy exercise stuff), or even while you’re pretending to work. Hey, I’m a cat. We’re all about slacking. Don’t judge. You can listen right from our website by clicking the link, or you can download it on Spotify, Stitcher, Castbox, or wherever you get your podcasts.

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Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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Proper Wound Care

Proper Wound Care

Tuesdays with Tony

Proper Wound Care

Pus. I’m not going to lie: we have an unnatural reaction to pus around here.  Especially large quantities of pus. The excitement when there’s a lot of pus potential is palpable. Phones come out with cameras at the ready, everyone gathers round, and the moment the scalpel nears the area, the crowd goes silent. I’m going to let you in on a little secret about why all this excitement happens the way it does: 99.9% of the time the horse is going to be OK, and so my Docs can revel in the joy of all that pus, while knowing that with a few simple care instructions this wound is going to heal.

 

Why all that pus?

 

Springhill Equine Veterinary ClinicLet’s start with why there’s all that pus in the first place. Pus is a collection of dead fighters from the immune system (these are cells called neutrophils, lymphocytes, and mast cells), along with some serum (the liquid part of blood), and dead invaders. There’s a couple of reasons the body makes buckets of pus. The first is that the bacteria involved cause the immune system to really send in the troops. This is common with bacteria in the genus Streptococci in particular, and these guys live on normal skin, so they are around when wounds happen.

The second is a foreign body. Pieces of wood are a favorite foreign body for horses. Wood can be a fun combination of reason one and two since all those nooks and crannies in wood can hide a lot of bacteria. The third reason is that the body can’t overcome the infection, and keeps sending more and more immune system cells.

 

Minimizing pus

 

I have learned, in my years supervising here at the Clinic, that not every human feels the same excitement about pus as my Docs. In an effort to assist with this pus disdain, let’s talk about how to minimize pus production. It starts with a simple saying that I get rather tired of hearing from Dr. Lacher: Dilution is the solution to pollution. She means you’re going to get to spend a lot of time with a hose pointed at your horse’s wound. When a wound happens, all kinds of bacteria take advantage of the situation to invade. The body responds with white blood cells, and Voila! Pus. By gently rinsing a wound, you send those bacteria on their merry way to go wreak havoc elsewhere.

Wise Cat Tip: If the wound is actively bleeding, don’t start rinsing quite yet. Wise Cat Tip #2: Take a picture with your phone, and send it to my Docs. This lets them help you make decisions about proper care. Turns out you can use that phone for more than taking pictures of cats, and looking at pictures of cats, and watching cat videos. Who knew?

After hosing the wound for a good 10 minutes, apply an antibacterial ointment like triple antibiotic ointment. Do not go with whatever crazy goop you have laying around. Nearly all of the random lotions, potions, and ointments you have laying around are actually bad for wounds. My rule is if the Docs didn’t tell me to put something else on there, then triple antibiotic it is. As you know, cat rules are the highest rules of the land. They must be followed.

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Keeping it clean

 

This is something I can really relate to, as a self-bathing creature. I like things clean. However, this doesn’t mean scrub a wound within an inch of its life. Gently cleaning with minimal soap once daily is all that’s needed. After soap, guess what? Run water over that wound for at least 10 minutes. After that, some triple antibiotic. If possible, a bandage, or even better, Sox for Horses covering a wound, which will help it heal significantly faster.

 

The bad news: horses love to cause injury to themselves. The good news: they do like to heal those wounds. With a little time, TLC, and water, most wounds will heal up great.

 

Now be a good human and subscribe to my blog below.

Your Fearless Feline Leader,

Tony

P.S. Want even more great horse knowledge? Tune in to the podcast the humans do called Straight from the Horse Doctor’s Mouth.

Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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Winter Prep

Winter Prep

Tuesdays with Tony

Boy, was it chilly here last weekend! Did you pull out your winter blankets? I know I limited my regular outdoor excursions to 5 minutes or less on Thursday and Friday. I found it most entertaining to ask my humans to let me out repeatedly, only to turn around, fluff myself up, and ask to be let back in because it was cold. It was great fun! Do you know the best ways to help your horses through the cold snaps this winter? Here’s what I have learned over the years from my docs.

Hay

  Did you know that one of the primary ways horses stay warm through the winter is by eating? That’s right. The calories we talk about in food are actually a measurement of heat energy. Your horse burns calories trying to keep warm. Feed provides those extra calories needed in the winter. Hay, specifically, has the added benefit of giving off heat as it ferments. This fermentation occurs in the horse’s cecum, which is kind of like a miniature version of the cow’s rumen. When provided with plenty of nice, good-quality forage, this internal fermentation process keeps horses nice and toasty!
    When feeding hay for the winter, please don’t make the mistake of throwing out a new round bale of coastal hay and letting your horses eat their fill all at once. Most likely, they will colic. Coastal hay is relatively fine, and it loves to get stuck in the large colon. My docs see sooooo many coastal hay impaction colics in the winter, you wouldn’t believe it. Don’t be a victim of this very common scenario.
   So, what is the right way to feed hay in the winter? If you choose to feed coastal hay, introduce your horse to the round bale gradually, over a period of several days to weeks. Limit their access to only a few hours a day at first. Or, better yet, feed flakes off of a round or square bale, rather than letting your horse have free-choice access. In addition, we recommend adding in alfalfa or peanut hay in a 1:4 ratio. The laxative effects of the alfalfa or peanut hay will help keep that coastal hay moving through. This means that for every flake of coastal hay your horse eats, you should be feeding about 1/4 flake of alfalfa or peanut hay. Alfalfa cubes or pellets (which should always be soaked in water before feeding) can also meet this requirement and prevent coastal hay impactions. A flake of alfalfa is equivalent to about 2 scoops (that is 3-quart scoops) of cubes or pellets. So, for every flake of coastal hay, you should feed about 1/2 a scoop of alfalfa cubes or pellets.
   One more word of Tony Wisdom: pay attention to the quality of your coastal hay. Make sure you are buying “horse hay,” not “cow hay.” The biggest difference is in how fine-stemmed the hay is. Certain varieties of coastal hay, such as Tifton 85, are more coarse-stemmed, more digestible, and this less likely to cause impactions.

Water

   As the saying goes, you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make him drink. Notice nobody ever said this about a cat. Cats hate water, but we are at least smart enough to keep ourselves hydrated. Nonetheless, there are some things you can do to get more water into your horses this winter.
    It has been shown that horses drink more warm water than cold water. Now, I’m not suggesting everyone needs to bring a coffee pot of hot water out to the barn every night. However, IF we get below freezing here in Florida this winter, you do need to make sure your horse’s water buckets are free of ice. And if you are having issues with your horse not drinking enough in the winter, a heater for your water trough is something to consider.
     Adding salt to your horse’s grain is another easy way to encourage drinking. Following the same theory as eating a bag of potato chips, having a salty dinner will make your horse thirsty. You can buy electrolytes or Himalayan salt for horses, but I’ll tell you a secret: table salt works just as well for this purpose. 1 tablespoon morning and night should do the trick! You should also provide access to a salt block for your horse at all times, but some horses are more apt to lick a salt block than others. Adding salt directly to the feed is the best way to ensure it gets into your horse.
    Another handy trick to get more fluids into your horse in the winter time is to soak their grain. Beet pulp and alfalfa cubes or pellets are excellent vehicles for soaking up water and getting your horse to consume it. That being said, most pelleted grains puff up nicely with water and can be soaked by themselves. Tony Pro Tip: don’t soak grain any longer than 10 minutes- it gets kinda rancid smelling and horses don’t like that. Beet pulp and alfalfa can be soaked as long as you like.

Shelter

    Everybody always wants to know about blankets. Blankets, blankets, blankets! The truth is, unless your horse is old, sick, thin, or body clipped, he probably doesn’t need a blanket in Florida. No, not even in the middle of the winter. Horses have a beautiful naturally water-repellent hair coat which insulates their body heat through those cold winter nights. You certainly don’t need to blanket any horse if the temperature is at or above 50 degrees. That’s their favorite weather!
Winter prep for horses
    All that horses need around here in the winter is some form of shelter to get out of the rain. It’s when they get wet and damp that the cold really becomes an issue. This shelter can be in the form of a barn, a run-in shed, or even a tree line. As long as your horses  have somewhere to escape the worst of the winds or driving rain, they will do just fine.
    For those horses who are old and/or thin going into the winter, it is a good idea to provide them with a little extra in the form of a waterproof sheet or blanket, and some extra hay. Usually the horses that run into trouble in the winter are those who are really lacking muscle mass and fat stores. So, start working on fattening up your hard-keepers before the temperatures drop!
       Hopefully I have given you some useful ideas to keep your horses nice and cozy this season! Most importantly, remember to save that warm, toasty spot in front of the fireplace for your cat.
     Stay warm!
           -Tony
P.S. Have you subscribed to this blog yet? Or listened to an episode of the amazing podcast that the humans record for you? It’s a fantastic free resource if you’re looking for more horse knowledge, which you obviously are, since you’re reading my blog. Alright, it’s nap time.

Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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Colic vs COLIC, and the Cost

Colic vs COLIC, and the Cost

Tuesdays with Tony

Colic vs COLIC, and the Cost

If I’ve learned anything from my years here at the Clinic, it’s that there’s colic, and then there’s COLIC. The colic kind of colic means some Banamine, some water and electrolytes, and, gasp, a whole lot less food over the next couple days. The COLIC kind of colic means one of two things: a whole bunch of fluids through an IV catheter, or surgery, or, even worse, both. The other difference: how much they cost. Being the wise and wonderful cat I am, I’m going to share with you all I learned about horse insurance the other night so that you can be prepared for the serious amounts of money COLIC can cost.

There are three different price brackets when talking about colic treatment. For the simple colic that just needs some drugs and some fluids, you can expect it to run somewhere in the $400 – $600 range. These things usually happen after hours, so there’s an emergency fee in there (unless you are on a Springhill Equine Wellness Plan!). If it’s a medical colic that doesn’t require surgery, but needs to come stay at the clinic for a few days, you’re looking at $800 – $2,000, depending on all kinds of things. This will include oversight by Yours Truly, so there’s that. For surgical colic, there is a very wide range of cost, because there’s a very wide range of surgeries, depending on what’s wrong. You can expect it to be somewhere between $7,500 – $15,000. I know, I know. I’ve napped on cars that were cheaper than that, too. So, let’s talk about insurance.

Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic

I can’t afford horse insurance

 

I’ll admit, I thought horse insurance was a whole lot of money. However, I learned from Rhonda Mack from Jerry Parks Insurance in Ocala, that for around $350 per year, a horse could have $11,000 of colic surgery coverage! That is a very reasonable number. But. Yep, I’m going to have a but here. This covers colic, but not much else. Keep reading for more insurance stuff, but know that there are very, very reasonable options to make sure you can help your horse.

 

How does insurance for horses work?

 

First, everyone decides on a value for your horse. No, you don’t just get to pick a number, any number. The value is based on purchase price (or stud fee if it’s a baby), training, show record, yada, yada, yada. Okay, we have a number. Now we start with a basic mortality policy. Everybody starts here. The premium on this policy is a percentage of that value number we came up with.

 

Now that you have mortality, you can add things like major medical or a medical assistance plan. Major medical will pay for just about anything your horse can do to themselves from colic to pneumonia to major lacerations to eye issues (and holy cow, can those get expensive fast!). Major medical will even help with diagnostics and treatments for lameness. More on the lameness stuff later. Or, for a more economical package, you can go with the assistance plan. It helps with colics, lacerations, etc., but not lameness. What does all this mean? You’ve got options when it comes to insurance!

 

One kicker to horse insurance is the pre-existing condition. If your horse has a problem with something, that thing gets excluded on future insurance policies. For example, your horse develops a left front lameness. My amazing Docs do their thing, and determine your horse has a lesion in the Suspensory ligament on that leg. Insurance will cover things this time around, but not after that.

 

Lameness and Insurance

 

If horses only got lame just after their insurance was renewed, we wouldn’t need to have this discussion. Horses don’t work that way, though. They like to go with “I’m going to go lame right before this insurance policy expires” plan. Great, you think. That horse I used as an example above with the Suspensory injury will be out for 6 months minimum. You won’t get to use all your insurance benefits because it happened 2 months before renewal. Never fear. In that scenario, the Suspensory will be covered for 3-4 months (depending on the insurer) of the new policy. But (I hate that word), it will be excluded after that and for all eternity going forward. Moral of the story here: have a talk with my Docs about lameness and insurance. It will help you make decisions.

 

What about ColiCare?

 

ColiCare, and a couple other similar programs, can be great ways to cover colic surgery! There’s a big but with them: they only cover surgery; not a medical colic. My Docs have the most experience with ColiCare, and they love it. SmartPak is easy to work with, and the payouts have been really quick and easy. My Docs are pretty “Meh” on the value of the supplement, but worth talking to them about it!

 

I know I can be a little bit snarky, but in all fairness to you humans, colic is tough. Heck, horse emergencies are tough. Insurance may be a way to help you handle those crazy emergencies a little better. Now I have to harass them about insuring me. There’s no way to put a value on all this amazingness, though, so that’s going to be tough.

 

Now be a good human. Scroll down a little further and subscribe to my blog. And if my blog isn’t enough to satiate your thirst for horse knowledge, check out the podcast the humans do called Straight From the Horse Doctor’s Mouth. You can get it on all the usual places, and I’ll admit, it’s pretty good, especially considering I’m not even on it. Imagine how awesome it would be if I was?

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Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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Is It PPID?

Is It PPID?

Tuesdays with Tony

Is It PPID?

There is an interesting phenomenon that seems to strike around this same time each year amongst the horses I see: they get hairy. Despite the consistency and repeat-ability of this syndrome, owners seem to worry every time this happens. What do they worry about, you ask? PPID. Affectionately known as Cushing’s disease, Pituitary Pars Intermedia Dysfunction, or PPID, is a disease primarily seen in senior horses. One of the many signs of this disease, and undoubtedly the most familiar sign to horse owners, is a long, shaggy hair coat. So, is your horse’s winter coat normal, or does he actually have PPID?

Let’s Review

   Why should you care if your horse has PPID anyway? Well, what if I told you your horse has a brain tumor? That’s a little scarier. PPID in horses is in fact caused by a tumor pressing on the pituitary gland in the brain. As the tumor grows, it causes the pituitary gland to overproduce certain hormones. These hormones can cause a myriad of problems when their levels are elevated. Problems such as laminitis, inability to fight off infections, weight loss, lethargy, and abnormal hair coat are commonly seen.
    The most concerning, even life-threatening, consequence of PPID is laminitis. There is no treatment for laminitis, and the damage caused by laminitis is irreversible. This is why preventing laminitis by treating the underlying PPID is so important.
    If you have a senior horse with PPID, you may not even realize there is anything wrong. On numerous occasions I have overheard an owner tell one of our docs that their horse acts 10 years younger since beginning treatment for PPID. Since lethargy, chronic infection, and weight loss are common clinical signs of this disease, it is not surprising that horses feel a whole lot better once their symptoms are properly managed.
    To tell you the truth, the classic long, curly hair coat is actually an advanced sign of PPID. Early signs include a change in attitude, decreased athletic performance, loss of top line, and slightly delayed shedding. Vets are trying to get better about recognizing these subtle, early signs, so that testing and treatment can be initiated sooner, and the more severe signs and effects of PPID can be prevented.

Let’s Test

   So let’s pretend it’s fall and your horse went ‘poof’ and blew out a long, winter hair coat seemingly overnight. Does he have PPID? Before making the diagnosis, our docs are probably going to ask you a few questions.
    First, is this normal for your horse? If he has been blowing out a shaggy winter coat on September 1st every year since he was 3 years old, it may be normal for him. Is his hair coat relatively even over his entire body? The abnormal hair growth associated with PPID is often patchy at first, found initially on the back of the lower limbs. Is the hair straight, or is it long and curly? A horse with a thick, long, curly hair coat covering his entire body has about a 90% chance of having PPID. Does he shed out completely in the spring? Some horses just grow thick winter coats; as long as they shed out completely at an appropriate time each year, they may be completely normal. Have you noticed any other signs? While many of the signs of PPID are somewhat non-specific, it is very common for horses to exhibit more than one. Does your horse have recurrent hoof abscesses, and you’ve also noticed he’s been losing weight recently? Has your horse been a bit slugging under saddle recently, and he also took forever to get over that eye infection he had earlier this year?
   If any of these scenarios sound like your horse, or if your vet suspects that your horse may have PPID, I really recommend that you have him tested. Did you know that there is a simple, one-time blood test that is highly accurate for diagnosing PPID? A baseline ACTH test is all that is needed; no stimulation testing, fasting, or dexamethasone suppression testing required! Did you also know that based on recent research you can test your horse for PPID any time of year? That’s right, there are now scientifically established reference ranges based on season that account for the normal rise in ACTH seen in horses in the fall.
    We now know that many of the signs we used to associate with “normal aging” in horses are actually signs of PPID. And better yet, this means they can be treated! So, ask your vet about testing for PPID at your next wellness visit.

Let’s Treat

   We are fortunate that there is an extremely effective, safe, and easy treatment available for horses with PPID. Prascend (the brand name for pergolide) is a tiny pink tablet you can readily hide in your horse’s grain every morning. Since the medication mimics a hormone naturally found in the horse’s body, side effects are very rare and mild. The best part about treating with Prascend is the results! I have been surprised again and again with the positive difference I’ve seen in horses that come through the clinic before and after starting treatment. And by starting treatment early, you can prevent the development of those advanced signs of PPID including laminitis, tendon and suspensory ligament breakdown, and recurrent infections.
     A rare but recognized side effect we sometimes see with Prascend is horses not wanting to eat their feed with the tablet in it. Lucky for you though, I have come up with some creative tips and tricks to address this issue: First, try splitting the dose into 1/2 tablet morning and night, rather than a whole tablet at once. If that doesn’t work, we can even try going to 1/2 tablet once a day, but we would want to re-test your horse after a few months to make sure his hormone levels were controlled at this dosage. If your horse simply refuses to eat his grain with even a partial tablet in it, try feeding his tablet in a soft treat like a stud muffin. You can also try enticing your horse to eat it with molasses or applesauce on top of his grain. Yummy!
   So now that you know why it’s important to know whether your horse has PPID, how and when we can test them, and how easy it is to treat them, what do you think? Is your fuzzy horse just gearing up for the coldest winter of the century, or might there be something more going on? Call me at the clinic to schedule your horse’s ACTH test, and let’s see if it’s PPID!
     Affectionately,
            Tony
P.S. Are you craving more horse knowledge? Check out the podcast that my docs make, Straight from the Horse Doctor’s Mouth. You can learn a lot in a half hour listening to them talk about various horse things. It’s pretty amazing, even to this cat, and I’m not easily impressed.
Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic

Tuesdays with Tony is the official blog of Tony the Clinic Cat at Springhill Equine Veterinary Clinic in Newberry, Florida. If you liked this blog, please subscribe below, and share it with your friends on social media! For more information, please call us at (352) 472-1620, visit our website at SpringhillEquine.com, or follow us on Facebook!

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