Sunday, November 14, 2010

10 Tips to Prevent colic




It causes normally placid horses to pace and paw at the ground. The pain it brings drives horses to continually lie down and rise, swing their heads from side to side, or grow restless. It is also the number one killer of horses across the country and around the world.

What is this common, extremely painful, and potentially fatal abdominal condition?

It is known as colic and chances are your horse is more susceptible to it than

you may realize. However, there are simple ways to help promote good digestive

health and help prevent colic in your horse.

colic types
Contrary to popular belief, colic is not a disease. Instead, it is a combination of symptoms that result from abdominal pain, intestinal displacement, or gastrointestinal obstruction.

Basically, there are three types of colic:



Gas Colic - the most common form of colic, occurs when gas collects
in your horse's bowels and causes pain, and sometimes a distended bowel,
as it passes. Horses with gas colic will often swing their heads from side to side,
stomp their feet, pin back their ears, roll their eyes, and exhibit gassy
stomach rumblings.

Obstructive Colic - this form of colic is often divided into two categories:
impaction colic occurs when food masses, parasites, or other foreign bodies
accumulate in the bowels and prohibit passage through the intestines;
sand colic occurs when pasture sand or soil is ingested and accumulates
in your horse's gut. Both cause lethargy, restlessness, pawing,
excessive sweating, and an absence of normal abdominal sounds.

Twisted Gut - this form of colic is caused by a physical twisting
of your horse's intestine. It causes extreme pain, excessive sweating,
discomfort, progressive restlessness, and is non-responsive to simple
pain relief medication.

colic causes
Horses have sensitive digestive systems. Therefore, any number of factors can cause colic in your horse, pony, or other equine. Although all horses are susceptible to colic, regardless of age, sex, or breed, some horses seem to be predisposed to colic due to digestive system anatomy or function. Regardless, the most common causes of colic include

Bloodworms (strongyles) that damage blood vessels near the bowel
Roundworms (ascarids) that accumulate and block intestines
Sudden diet change that upsets stomach and digestive function
Lack of drinking water that causes food to bind together, causing an impaction
Horses that gulp food without chewing, which often results in impaction
Ingestion of sand or dirt, which accumulates in the intestines

colic prevention
Effective colic prevention relies on good digestive health. Use the following ten steps to maintain proper function of your horse's digestive system and help prevent colic. However, any immediate change to your horses diet, exercise, or daily routine can also cause colic and, therefore, needs to be gradual.

#1 Feed a high quality, roughage-rich diet. Grass is best, followed by hay.
Grass or hay should always be available. Feed smaller amounts of grain
unless work demands or your veterinarian suggests more.
#2 Mimic natural grazing schedules by feeding two or three smaller portions
of grain throughout the day, as opposed to one single feeding that
overloads the digestive tract.
#3 Offer fresh, clean water at all times. Use stock tank cleaners to keep
troughs clean and free from insects. Hang a water bucket in your
horse stall and fill it daily to encourage your horse to drink.
#4 Regularly deworm your horse with a suitable Ivermectin-based wormer.
In addition, pyrantel-based continuous wormers may also help control
internal parasites.
#5 Offer frequent, if not continual, pasture turnout. Daily exercise is
very important. If necessary, build an electric horse fence to help
contain your horse while he exercises and plays in the pasture.
#6 Use feed pans to lift feed away from sand and other contaminants
but still mimic natural, heads-down grazing postures. Elevated wall
feeders lift equine food even farther off the ground.
#7 Use manure forks and suitable buckets to muck stalls frequently.
Also harrow pastures to break up manure and help break the
parasite life cycle.
#8 Remove noxious weeds and other indigestible substances from hay,
bedding, and pasture grass. Suitable perimeter sprays and traps
can kill insects before they invade your horse's hay or stall bedding.
#9 Arrange for regular dental checkups. Properly aligned teeth are better
at chewing food, which leads to improved digestion and less chance
of impaction.
#10 Use digestive supplements to promote beneficial bacteria growth,
bulk up fiber intake, and improve digestive health. Some are even
formulated to help flush sand out of your horse's digestive tract.
Calming supplements can also help reduce anxiety that can lead
to digestive stress during travel.

Olsen's Grain has everything you need to help prevent colic from
high-quality feeds to psyllium & electrolytes. Stop by and ask
any one of our associates to help you with your pet needs.













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