Equine Intensive and Critical Care Services at
LSU: An Inside Look Equine emergency and
critical care is a growing facet of veterinary medicine with more and more
horses requiring specialized, immediate, and advanced veterinary care. The
intensity of emergency care required is dependent upon the underlying disease
and any accompanying abnormalities, and services may often range from body
temperature control to emergency surgical intervention. With the diagnostic and
therapeutic advances made in recent years in equine medicine and surgery,
emergency and critical care can play a major role in the successful treatment
and rehabilitation of horses faced with performance-limiting and
life-threatening conditions or diseases.
This is especially true at the LSU School of
Veterinary Medicine where the Veterinary Teaching Hospital Equine Clinic
identifies 20-25 percent of its patients as emergency cases. Internists,
surgeons, theriogenologists, ophthalmologists, and numerous other specialists,
technicians, and students join efforts daily to save and sustain critically ill
equine patients.
"Patients are generally presented for
emergency and critical care services for any of the following reasons: acute
gastrointestinal tract disease (colic), traumatic injuries, respiratory
distress, neurologic disease, ophthalmic diseases, and respiratory tract
emergencies," explained Dr. Rustin Moore, director of LSUs Equine Health
Studies Program (EHSP). In addition, many of the horses presented for emergency
or critical care are also dehydrated and are predisposed to developing
secondary conditions such as laminitis (founder), pressure sores, diarrhea and
weight loss.
Gastrointestinal tract disease is estimated to
account for 60 to 65 percent of all emergency work at LSU. These horses
generally require extensive evaluation upon arrival at the hospital. They
usually undergo a thorough physical examination, including passage of a stomach
tube to evacuate accumulated liquid, a rectal examination, abdominal
ultrasound, and other diagnostic tests. The need for surgery is obvious in some
horses, while in others it is not. Some patients will be constantly observed
and will undergo repeated evaluations to determine if the problem should be
treated through medical or surgical means.
Neonatal foals with life-threatening illnesses
also comprise a large majority of emergency or critical care services,
especially in the spring. "Neonatal care is often the most intellectually
challenging and technically demanding care provided because of the fragile
nature of foals, the multiple disease processes occurring, and because of their
inability to lie, stand or walk," said Moore. Foals usually need an
individual devoted entirely to their care to administer medication, assure they
are nursing, feed them, observe their progress, and help them maintain their
sternal position to facilitate breathing.
Horses presented with acute neurologic disease
are a major challenge for equine clinicians because of the intense level of
care required, including the administration of necessary diagnostic tests,
prevention of self-trauma, and prevention of trauma to the attendants. Rabies,
viral encephalitis, equine protozoal encephalomyelitis (EPM), cervical
vertebral malformation (wobblers), head or spinal trauma, and herpes
myeloencephalitis are all possible causes of the severe ataxia (incoordination)
and weakness and subsequent recumbency (inability to rise) that plague such
horses. The LSU Equine Clinic has two Andersen rescue slings which suspend
neurologic patients in the necessary position to support and treat them.
Without such assistance, many of these horses would die or require euthanasia,
either because of the primary disease or secondary complications such as
rhabdomyolysis (tying up).
Traumatic injuries, including lacerations,
fractures and open-joint injuries, require immediate stabilization and quick
response with suturing, wound cleansing and fixation of fractures. Without a
quick response, administration of first aid, and stabilization of these
patients, successful rehabilitation and return to athletic performance could be
very unlikely.
When an individual anticipates that their horse
may need emergency or critical care, Moore explains that certain steps may be
very helpful to equine clinicians upon treating the patient. For example, he
recommends having a local veterinarian first examine the patient, and then
stabilize the patient before it is relocated to an emergency facility. He also
urges individuals to contact the emergency facility, alerting them to the
horses condition and giving them an estimated arrival time.
"Our total equine case load has increased
over 15 percent each year since 1990. Due to the steady and substantial
increase of horses requiring LSUs emergency services, the EHSP is currently
raising funds to expand, improve and update its emergency and critical care
operations," explained Moore.
The new equine intensive care unit, projected
to cost $845,000, will be expanded from a two-stall facility to a 10-stall
facility to better meet the growing demand. The new unit will include four
stalls designed for critically ill neonatal foals and their dams, one stall
with padded walls for patients with severe neurologic or musculoskeletal
disease, and five stalls for critically ill and injured adult horses.
The program has currently raised over $460,000
and hopes to secure the remainder through its multiple-breed, Internet stallion
service auction, which begins September 1. "The Stallion Service Auction
offers mare owners the opportunity to select top quality stallions for breeding
with potentially discounted fees," said Moore.
Stallion owners from Louisiana, Texas,
Arkansas, Mississippi, Kentucky, Virginia, California, Oregon, New York, and
other states have currently donated over 110 stallion breedings to the auction.
Benefits to stallion owners include: no direct costs incurred for the donation
of a stallion; recognition as participants in the auction; promotion of the
stallions and the farms in numerous local, regional, and national equine
publications and the Internet; and a tax deduction of contributions in the full
amount of the stallions regular stud fee, regardless of what it brings in the
auction.
All stallion services offered in the auction
are intended for the 2002 breeding season and individuals may bid on any number
of stallion services. Bidding on the stallions opens September 1 and closes
October 15 at noon CDT. Bids will be placed on the auction website with the
highest bid always being current, and bids made over regular stud fees are tax
deductible for the mare owners. Auction winners will be notified by October 16
and the auction results will be announced on the website by November 3.
Detailed auction information and bids are
available athttp://www.equine.vetmed.lsu.edu. Individuals interested in
donating a stallion service, placing bids on the stallion services, or
receiving more information on the Stallion Service Auction can visit the
auction website listed above, contact Dr. Rustin Moore at (225) 578-9500, or
e-mail ssa@vetmed.lsu.edu.
|
|