Horse injury

Read our curated health and wellness articles about pets to help keep your loved ones healthy!
SYMPTOM HORSE Back Pain in Horses

Back pain is a common condition in horses, typically noticed by owners when horses begin to resent grooming or saddling, or perform poorly under saddle.

· 2 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Loss of Hearing (Deafness) in Horses

Hearing loss and deafness are relatively rare symptoms in horses, and refer to the partial or complete inability to perceive auditory signals.

· 4 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Collapse in Horses

Collapse is identified when a horse suddenly drops to the ground, possibly losing consciousness in the process.

· 2 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Head Tilt in Horses

Head tilt occurs when a horse holds its head on an angle, with its ears pointing to one side of the body and the nose pointing to the other.

· 3 min read
CONDITION HORSE Ethmoid Hematomas in Horses

Ethmoid hematomas in horses are noncancerous masses that develop on the ethmoids, a highly vascularized area of the nasal cavity

· 3 min read
CONDITION HORSE Black Walnut Toxicosis in Horses

Black walnut toxicosis is a severe condition that occurs when horses come into contact with black walnut shavings or ingest the bark, pollen, or leaves of the black walnut tree (Juglans nigra).

· 4 min read
CONDITION HORSE Guttural Pouch Disease in Horses

Guttural pouch disease affects the large outpouchings of the auditory tube within the back half of the skull in horses. Disease in the guttural pouches can arise from bacterial infections, fungal infections, or air becoming trapped in the pouch.

· 4 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Dropping Feed and Difficulty Chewing (Quidding) in Horses

Quidding is the term used for when horses drop feed from their mouths while they are chewing, or leave balls of partially chewed hay or other food behind in their feed buckets. Typically the cause is dental issues including sharp or broken teeth, abscesses, or foreign objects stuck in the mouth.

· 3 min read
CONDITION HORSE Choke in Horses

Choke is an esophageal obstruction caused by poorly chewed food or other material that gets stuck in the throat of horses. Unlike choking in humans, the airway is not compromised, therefore choke is not immediately life-threatening in horses.

· 7 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Seizures in Horses

Seizures are characterized by uncontrolled muscle movement and spasming, which may affect a horse’s entire body or be localized to a smaller group of muscles. Seizures are rare in horses, but have a variety of causes including injuries, infections, toxicoses, metabolic imbalances, or disorders affecting the brain.

· 3 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Recumbency in Horses

Recumbency describes a horse who is lying down, unable to rise. Recumbent horses are typically laying flat on their side, but some may be able to sit up on their chest. Recumbency may be caused by a wide variety of conditions, including injuries, degenerative diseases, inflammatory diseases, tumors, infectious diseases, toxicosis, and neurological conditions.

· 4 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Nosebleed (Epistaxis) in Horses

Nosebleeds (epistaxis) are common in horses, and may stem from infections, cancers, foreign objects, injuries, or exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhage. Nosebleeds may present acutely or chronically, and range from drops of blood falling from one nostril to a stream of blood from both.

· 3 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Swollen Legs and Stocking Up in Horses

Swollen legs, sometimes referred to as “stocking up,” are a noticeable increase in the size of the legs, giving affected horses the appearance of a “fat leg”. If leg swelling is accompanied with pain, heat, or lameness, it requires emergency veterinary attention.

· 2 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Tying Up (Muscle Twitching and Cramping) in Horses

Muscle twitching and cramping, also referred to as “tying up”, are symptoms that appear from painful and continuous muscular contractions. During a severe episode, horses might refuse to move and suffer from extreme pain.

· 3 min read
CONDITION HORSE Hypothermia in Horses

Hypothermia happens when the core body temperature drops below normal. Hypothermia is a rare condition in horses, and it is usually caused by environmental accidents such as falling into a frozen body of water.

· 4 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Peeling or Sloughing Skin in Horses

Peeling or sloughing skin in horses is characterized as an area of the body where the skin has begun to lose its surface layer. Generally appears as flaking or patches of skin that are missing or damaged.

· 2 min read
CONDITION HORSE Laminitis in Horses

Laminitis refers to inflammation of the lamellae, the support structure that holds the coffin bone in place within the hoof capsule. The lamellae are extremely sensitive, making laminitis a very painful condition.

· 6 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Nasal Discharge in Horses

Nasal discharge is an excretion of fluids from one or both nostrils. It varies in intensity and severity in horses, from clear to discolored and from innocuous to life threatening

· 4 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Exercise Intolerance in Horses

Exercise intolerance is the decreased ability to tolerate strenuous exercise. Exercise intolerance is one of the first signs of exhaustion

· 3 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Limited Mobility in Horses

Limited mobility (LM) in horses is defined as a reduction in agility and/or movement, and is a condition that mainly affects senior and geriatric horses (over 18 years of age).

· 3 min read
SYMPTOM HORSE Swelling of Lower Limb Joints in Horses

Joint swelling is a common symptom in horses and has a variety of causes.

· 2 min read
CONDITION HORSE Carpitis in horses

Carpitis is inflammation of the soft connective tissues on the surface of the bones of the carpus of a horse. The horse carpus is the equivalent of the human knee joint. This inflammation can involve the fibrous joint capsule, synovial membrane, and associated ligaments and bones of the carpus.

· 2 min read
CONDITION HORSE Contusions in horses

Contusions also known as bruises are caused by blunt trauma to a horse's head, body or leg. When a horse takes a direct blow to its body, the underlying structures (like muscles and blood vessels) can be damaged or broken.

· 2 min read

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