
"Doc – Does summer bring on horse problems
that may not be seen during the rest of the year??"
© A.J. Neumann, D.V.M.
published in The Draft Horse
Journal, Autumn 2004
Sure. Summer with its long hot days and warm nights, its abundance
of insects and rainfall, which may be plentiful or non-existent,
can bring on problems which we see in the horse and are mostly
non-existent during the other three seasons. Of course this will
apply largely to the North Temperate Zone of North America.
Let’s look into four common problems of the horse which
I see occurring in late spring and summer.
EXCESSIVE SALIVATION
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“White Clover Slobbers” – Mare
slobbers about one pint to one quart of saliva at a time.
She has been on a white clover pasture for about 30 days.
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Close up of white clover in the pasture.
Notice the brown to black spots on the clover leaves.
This is the fungus which causes the problem of the excess
salivation of the mare.
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Let’s take the first one and call it “excessive
salivation” or “slobbering.” When this condition
occurs the animal is frothing or drooling a large amount of
saliva. This generally will be the result of a chemical, traumatic
or infectious injury to the mouth. It could also be a symptom
of “choke” in which the esophagus is plugged and
the animal cannot swallow. Factors causing the trauma may be
a poor fitting bit, points on the molars or the ingestion of
thorns and bristles, which have injured the mucous membrane
of the mouth. Infectious diseases such as vesicular stomatitis
and rabies will also cause the affected animal to slobber.
All of these causes for excessive salivation must be checked
out in making a diagnosis.
If profuse salivation is the only clinical sign or symptom
and the horse, mule or donkey is on pasture look to see how
much clover or alfalfa is available for consumption. Common
legumes such as alfalfa, red clover, white clover, alsike clover,
lupines, cow peas and kudzu can be infected with the fungus
Rhizoctonia leguminicola which produces an indolizidine alkaloid
mycotoxin known as slaframine. This mycotoxin is occasionally
found in red clover and alfalfa hay.
During hot, humid and wet seasons white clover grows abundantly
in many pastures. The mold grows on the small leaves, producing
black or brown spots on them, which can easily be seen. Horses
love white clover and after eating the infected plant for several
days they begin to slobber a large amount of saliva. They may “run
at the eye,” have diarrhea, lose weight and their mucous
membranes may turn slightly yellow. One noticeable symptom
is frequent urination with the urine being yellow in color.
Pregnant mares, eating much infected clover, may abort.
Overall the most pronounced symptom is the excessive drooling
of pints or quarts of saliva at a given time.
Horses so affected will recover quickly in three or four days
if removed from the clover pasture. They can be returned to
the pasture after it has been mowed, the infected hay removed
and destroyed and the new forage does not show the brown or
black spots on the leaves.
As a boy growing up among horses and horse people I heard
this often called “the white clover slobbers.” By
the way, it will also affect cattle and sheep.
You would be very surprised to find this condition is often
misdiagnosed. The pictures I show you here illustrate a case
I had in July 2004. One vet thought it was her teeth; another
thought it might be vesicular stomatitis. The mare was pastured
on a two-acre area just covered with white clover due to abundant
rainfall and the ideal weather to produce the growth of the
forage. FOXTAIL TRAUMA
Now let’s look at a second condition we often see
in the summer and it may carry over into the winter. I call
it “foxtail trauma.”
This condition occurs when a pasture becomes overgrazed
or the normal forage grasses do not grow due to drought.
It also occurs when the owner of the livestock becomes desperate
for hay and he mows oat or wheat stubble fields and puts
up the clippings for hay.
Cattle will generally eat any type or kind of forage. Horses
and mules are more selective, however, they will eat almost
anything when faced with a lean table. Towards the end of
the summer some animals find themselves forced to eat foxtail
barley, bristle grass and wheat or rye stalks containing
their awns. If they are then fed poor hay containing a large
amount of foxtail barley, the problem worsens.
These animals will exhibit excessive salivation and drooling.
They will have difficulty in eating and begin to lose weight.
An examination of the mouth, tongue and cheeks will reveal
a large number of ulcers present in the mucous membranes.
The ulcers will be especially prominent at the gum line near
the teeth. The animal will probably have very bad breath.
You will not see the barbs or awns, as they are deep in the
tissue.
Treatment of this condition is simple. Remove the horses
from the pasture or hay being fed and feed them coarse stemmed
alfalfa roughage mixed with good quality grass hay. The act
of chewing the coarse stemmed roughage will remove the barbs
and the ulcers will soon heal. It will not take long and
the animals will be back on course.
PHOTOSENSITIVITY OR “DEW POISONING”
A third common disease or condition of the horse and mule
which is seen primarily in the summer is known as “photosensitivity.”
This condition occurs in horses which are grazing clover,
especially alsike clover, in wet and humid weather. It does
not have to rain but will occur simply in dew laden clover
pastures. The affected horses will develop a photosensitivity
and hepatitis known as Trifoliosis. Horses and sheep grazing
on kleingrass in hot humid weather will also succumb to the
same condition.
Horses grazing on clover pastures will develop an acute
photosensatization involving the white areas of the muzzle,
lips, nose and the areas of the feet between the bulbs of
the heel. These areas of dermatitis will blister and peel.
The condition is commonly referred to as “dew poisoning” because
of the location of the dermatitis and its contact with the
dew and clover in the pasture. Some of these horses will
have yellow mucous membranes and when blood is drawn and
tested will have high serum elevations in liver enzyme tests.
Sometimes these horses may show liver degeneration and enlargement
of the organ.
Occasionally some of these affected horses will show a good
amount of swelling in the knee, hock and pastern joints.
In my experience these afflicted horses will recover if
removed from the pasture. I apply olive oil, to which I have
added some dexamethazone, to the photosensitized area of
the nose, muzzle and the rear areas of the feet. It is best
to keep the horse out of the sun for a week or so. For those
animals which have swollen joints, I put them on anti-histamines
and dexamethazone for several days. They respond to the treatment
very well.
I have included pictures of a young roan filly which illustrate
the “dew poisoning” condition. You will notice
the areas of photosensitization and the swollen joints. She
fully recovered in about a week. Horses may graze the same
pasture without problems when growing and weather conditions
become drier.
SUMMER SORE
The so-called “summer sore” is the fourth disease
or condition, which plagues the horse population especially
in the summertime.
There are three species of stomach worms that invade the
equine’s stomach. Since house and stable flies act
as intermediate hosts for these parasites and the larvae
the flies carry often invade wounds and abrasions on the
horse, one can readily see this becomes a seasonal problem.
Through the action of these flies, wounds, especially those
that are left unattended, may be infected with untold numbers
of the microscopic larvae. With the larvae present in the
tissue more so-called “scar tissue” is formed
due to the irritation in the area. These summer sores can
expand into non-healing ugly appearing masses of connective
or scar tissue.
In addition, due to the flies’ activities, larvae
will invade the eyes and the conjunctiva causing a chronic
infection of the area called conjunctivitis.
With the advent of the drug ivermectin, it became possible
to control the stomach worm adults as well as the larvae
in the tissues of the horse, as the drug will destroy the
larvae regardless of where they reside in the host animal.
The treatment of summer sores today is relatively simple.
If there is a large mass of infected tissue at the wound
site, it should be surgically removed. The area then should
be treated daily with a good wound medicine containing among
other things, ivermectin.
I have injected small amounts of ivermectin into these wounds
with apparently excellent results as well as using the topical
wound treatment.
It is also important to treat the animal orally every month
for several times with the proper dose of a worming product
containing the drug ivermectin.
There are probably more conditions of the equine, which
are summer related, but I believe the four I have discussed
are the most common and several of them may challenge a person’s
diagnostic ability when he or she first encounters them. |