Michigan Horse Confirmed With EHV-4
The horse’s facility is under voluntary quarantine following the positive test.
The horse’s facility is under voluntary quarantine following the positive test.
Here’s what researchers know about the unexpected demise of healthy equine athletes during or immediately after exercise.
Study: Horses’ arteries grow thicker and harden with age, making them more prone to rupture.
A 10-day-old foal in Switzerland became the world’s first horse to undergo successful balloon valvuloplasty to correct a faulty pulmonary artery valve.
How do you feed recreational riding horses to meet their nutritional and digestive needs without causing weight gain? Get those questions and more answered during this live recording of our podcast. Sponsored by Nutrena.
Metabolic profiling might hold the key to pinpointing which at-risk equids are most likely to develop the hoof disease laminitis.
When horses lose a significant amount of blood, veterinarians can perform transfusions to correct life-threatening anemia.
Researchers found extra body fat causes movement asymmetries and affects horses’ performance on a chemical level.
Learn from Dr. Jennifer Janes, part of the University of Kentucky’s CSI team for horse diseases, conditions, and poisonings.
Rapid weight loss can lead to hyperlipemia, a serious and sometimes fatal condition.
He might seem perfect—but before you call him yours, determine if a horse is sound and serviceable for the job at hand and if you can live with his inevitable flaws.
Hormone imbalances wreak havoc on horses and their hooves. Here’s advice to help manage equine metabolic syndrome.
Researchers confirm that misconceptions about what constitutes obesity exist among horse show judges.
Dr. Andrew van Eps suggests addressing obesity now to prevent laminitis, shares new insight into supporting limb laminitis, and offers advice about icing feet in acute cases.
This marks the second documented case of a newborn foal contracting atypical myopathy and the first to link the condition to toxins passed through the mare’s milk.
Buttercups can cause mouth pain and blisters, drooling, oral and gastric ulcers, colic, and diarrhea in horses that eat them.
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