SolveYourProblem.com Article Series: Horse Care
Teach Me Horse Care Tips
What
Every Horse Owner Should Know About Worms
There are four
common types of parasitic worms that can find a home in a horse’s body. These worms can be
harmful to the horse and make feeding and walking in the pasture
a very miserable and a difficult experience. If a horse has
too many worms in its body, it could die. De-worming a horse
once a year is recommended to ensure that worms will not survive
to multiply and take over the horse’s body. Ask a veterinarian
which medications the best for preventive de-worming. There
are many on the market today that can kill one or more species
of worm. Horses contract worms from poor living conditions,
other horses that have been mistreated, and from contaminated
drinking water. Cleaning out stalls and refreshing water everyday
is one way to prevent spreading the worms to the other horses
living in the stable.
There four types of worms that can affect a horse. These include
strongyles, tapeworms, ascarids, and bots. The first three
can infect a horse through the feces of other horses. If a
contaminated horse leaves feces on the ground and another horse
steps on it and moves it around the rest of the stable, it
will eventually get into the feed, grass, and into the water.
Strongyles, which seem to affect younger horses the most, begin
as larvae growing up in the arteries, gut wall, and liver.
As they grow, they travel through the body heading for the
large intestine where they will live out their lifespan. Once
inside the large intestine, strongyles will feed of the digested
food leaving little nutrients for the horse. This can cause
several problems. Stunted growth, intestinal problems, artery
collapse, and eventually death are common in horses affected
by strongyles. By separating the older horses from the younger
horses, this parasite has less chance to infect the horses.
Tapeworms are usually uncommon in horses. They, too, are transferred
by unclean stall conditions and through feces. Tapeworms can
live for years inside the stomach lining of its host. But if
many tapeworms gather in the stomach, this can cause blockage,
which could cause the horse to die. Tapeworms can be up to
twelve inches long. They too keep a horse from receiving proper
nutrients from food. There are many things horse breeders can
do to prevent the spread of tapeworms. Rotating feed to make
sure it is free of feces and clean out stalls often will prevent
the spread of this parasite. Since the tapeworm is the least
common of all parasites, if stalls are cleaned, infestation
should not be a problem. Keep in kind that getting rid of a
tapeworm is far more difficult to deal with than contracting
one. Tapeworms can grow back if the head of the worm is not
removed with the rest of its body. Killing one with medicine
takes time. The damage could already be done, so proper prevention
is important.
Ascarids are worms that affect the liver and the small intestine.
These worms are similar to strongyles in that they affect younger
horses. As with the other worms, proper cleaning of stalls
is important in keeping infestation to a minimum. If not treated,
the horse will probably die from colic or an aneryurism.
Bots are transferred differently from the other worms. These
worms transport by insects that land on the horse’s hair, such
as flies. The horse ingests the eggs, which turn into larvae
on the horse’s tongue. Eventually, the worms make their way
to the stomach where they live on digested food and stomach
acids. This can result in a smaller, weaker horse that has
not had the proper nutrients to survive. Bot eggs should be
removed by cutting eggs out of the hair on the horse or by
wiping them off with warm water. This will prevent the horse
from digesting them.
Horses must be kept in clean stalls that are refreshed every
few days with new grass and hay. Drinking water should be changed
at least once a day. Grooming horse often will prevent bots
and other worms from getting into the horse. Young horses need
to be separated from the older ones during pasture times if
at all possible. This will prevent the spread of strongyles
and ascarids. Keeping all horses that live in the same stable
together and not letting them graze with horses from another
stable is a good idea. Since worms are easy to spread, proper
precautions will make it harder to contaminate a horse. #
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SolveYourProblem.com : 2007
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