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Poor Air Quality and Lung Damage in Horses
Q: How does long-term exposure to barn dust and poor ventilation damage a horse’s lungs, and can that damage be reversed after making management changes?
A: Horses exposed to dusty barns develop airway inflammation surprisingly quickly—within just a few hours. If the exposure continues for months, the lungs can start to undergo structural changes. The good news is most horses only develop a mild form of asthma, which is fully reversible. These horses might show subtle signs such as an occasional cough, reduced performance, or taking longer to recover after exercise.
A smaller number of horses go on to develop severe asthma, which causes frequent coughing and obvious breathing difficulty at rest (nostril flaring, strong abdominal effort). In these cases permanent lung changes occur, making the horse prone to flare-ups for life if exposed to dusty elements including hay.
Dust Exposure in Horses
Most dust exposure happens during hay feeding—especially with round bales, hay racks, or stall hay nets. Feeding from a hay net in the stall can increase dust exposure three to four times compared to feeding hay on the ground. Similarly, hay fed in tubs or hay savers results in higher dust exposure. Hay has a high level of airborne particles. The dust particles that do the most harm are extremely fine (airborne particulate matter 2.5–PM10), small enough to travel deep into the lungs and irritate the airways.
While good barn ventilation and low-dust bedding (such as wood shavings) help, they don’t eliminate the problem. That’s because most harmful particles are released while horses eat dry hay—even hay that looks and smells good. To effectively protect your horse, modify or replace hay by:
Once changes are made, it usually takes six to eight weeks for inflammation in horse’s lungs to decrease. Recovery can be accelerated by:
Treatment and Prognosis
Even horses with severe asthma can often return to their previous level of performance once proper management and therapy are in place. Corticosteroid treatment can quickly improve breathing, but if dust exposure isn’t reduced, signs typically return within a week of stopping the medication. Lasting improvement only comes with effective dust management; the earlier changes happen, the better the long-term outcome.
Written by:
Laurent Couëtil, DVM, Dipl. ACVIM
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