Sunday, 22 July 2012

How to Get Rid of Internal Parasites on Horses

By Jericho Bush


A successful deworming is a direct result of administering the product at the proper time and at the correct dose, basing on the horse's weight. Parasites are known to steal nutrients from the food taken by your horse and causes gastrointestinal irritations. Ultimately, as what your veterinarian would likely tell you, they can cause severe medical conditions like intestinal ruptures, colic and even death. The three main things you must provide for your horse for his good health are clean water, high quality feed and a decent de-worming program.

A lot of people dont know but there are over 150 numerous kinds of parasites that could infest your horse. One type of parasites are classified as the large stronglyes or bloodworms. A few examples are ascarids, bots, tapeworms, pinworms, and threadworms. Normally, these species could lay more than 200, 000 eggs everyday. The thing with all these parasites is that they may all be present in your horse simultaneously, just in different lifecycle stages. So yes, while your horse may look healthy and happy, you don't know what is happening inside.

These silent killers can damage tissues and vital organs, major blood vessels, cause obstructions and ulcerations in the digestive tract. Pinworms can really irritate horses and cause intense anal itching. Some signs or symptoms of infestation may (and may is the operative word, since you won't usually see signs of problems externally) include dull, rough coat, weight loss, tail rubbing (hair loss), colic, depression, coughing/nasal discharge, loss of appetite etc. The most effective thing to do if you see some of these signs is talk to your Veterinarian about getting a fecal examination.

By counting the types and number of eggs, the Vet can then tell you which de-worming program will work. This test in combination with a good worming program will keep your horses protected from the ravages of pests. You can give wormer four ways, oral paste syringe, oral liquid syringe, nasogastric tube and as a feed additive. In many cases horses will not feed on something they smell in their feed, so if you can work with the other two methods, you'd complete worming effectively.

Nasogastric ingestion will have to be completed by the vets. To make sure they do swallow the dose, you can do one of two things. Place your thumbs into either side of their mouth to make them open their mouth and swallow the paste or liquid they were holding in their mouth, or put your hand under their chin and tip their head up so they must swallow. Internal parasites - out of sight, out of mind - can kill your horse. Parasites are normally out of sight but they can bring severe damage on the insides.




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