Horse & Hound

Vet clinic Bacterial meningitis in horses

Surviving the rare, aggressive infection bacterial meningitis is almost unheard of, yet one pony defied the odds to pull through.

- Andrea Oakes reports

‘We had to change his IV fluid bags every two hours, day and night, so we camped beside his stable’

SARAH WAYLAND ON JERRY’S INTENSIVE TREATMENT

LAST Christmas, the Wayland family prepared themselves for the worst. After 10 days of providing round-the-clock care for Jerry, their seriously ill Connemara gelding, it seemed as if he was losing the battle.

“His head had started to tilt until it was twisted, while his left eye had dropped in its socket so you could only see the white part,” recalls Sarah Wayland. “He then stopped eating and drinking and was struggling to stand. We had to make a decision — put him down or carry on.”

Jerry was fighting bacterial meningitis, an infection that causes inflammati­on of the membranes — “meninges” — that surround the brain and spinal cord. The condition affects the horse’s central nervous system, resulting in neurologic­al problems including loss of balance, muscle spasm and paralysis. It is incredibly rare and typically fatal.

After discussing euthanasia options with her daughter, Tia, and the attending vet, Sarah felt that Jerry deserved one last chance. Her instinct proved right. The road to recovery was lengthy and often challengin­g, but the 16-year-old gelding can count himself among the few known equine survivors of the disease.

EMERGENCY MEASURES

SIGNS that something was amiss had first emerged earlier that month, when Jerry was taken to Towcester Equine Vets for a final gastroscop­e after treatment for gastric ulcers. His temperatur­e had risen in reaction to the sedative, while an abnormally high level of white blood cells in a blood sample indicated some sort of infection.

“Tia had ridden him the day before and he was fine,” says

Sarah. “We took him home with some antibiotic­s and instructio­ns to rest him, but two days later he seemed to lose his balance.

The vet came straight out and confirmed that the infection was affecting his neurologic­al system.”

Jerry was given a steroid injection to reduce inflammati­on, but later that night his condition deteriorat­ed dramatical­ly.

“It was decided that he should go to Newmarket Equine Hospital [NEH] for intensive care, but he was puffing and shaking so much that he wouldn’t load,” says Sarah, recalling the efforts of a large team of vets and helpers to get him onto the lorry.

Towcester Equine vet Becky Price MRCVS says: “When we visited Jerry as an emergency call-out, he was in a bad way. He was trembling and neurologic­ally challenged both centrally and peripheral­ly — he didn’t know where his legs were. We tried to stabilise him with sedatives and muscle relaxants but he couldn’t travel. We had to bring the hospital to him.”

Supportive ropes and intravenou­s (IV) lines were hung from the stable rafters, while Becky worked with NEH specialist­s to pinpoint the problem.

“It was obvious from Jerry’s blood tests that we were dealing with something pretty significan­t, although we had ruled out infectious conditions such as strangles and equine herpes,” she says. “Diagnosis for bacterial meningitis involves a spinal tap — taking a sample of the CSF [cerebrospi­nal fluid] surroundin­g the spinal cord to test for evidence of infection. This is a risky procedure, however, especially when conditions are not sterile, and can even be fatal.

“We suspected bacterial meningitis because of the way Jerry was responding to therapy,” adds Becky. “The prognosis was very guarded as survival rates are extremely low.”

Jerry required twice-daily veterinary attention and intensive nursing. He was fitted with an IV catheter and a drip, to prevent dehydratio­n and provide cardiovasc­ular support.

“We had to change his IV fluid bags every two hours, day and night, so we camped beside his stable in the yard owners’ lorry,” says Sarah, who remains

indebted to Sam Lennard and Barry Grout of Castle Farm Equestrian in Warwickshi­re for their hands-on support. “We went home for two hours on Christmas Day, but otherwise we didn’t leave him.

“The following night, when he really went downhill, we wondered if enough was enough,” she adds. “So many tears were cried. We said goodbye a number of times.”

The pony battled on, however. Sarah and Tia pushed tiny amounts of chopped-up hay and water into his paralysed mouth so that he could chew. As the infection subsided, he slowly gained strength, until he could at last come off the antibiotic­s, painkiller­s and IV treatment.

‘HE LOOKED DRUNK’

AS they finally started to believe that Jerry might survive, the Waylands wondered what sort of pony they would be left with.

“When he took his first few steps out of the stable, three months later, he looked drunk,” says Sarah. “He needed two people to help him in front and another behind to hold his tail and steady him, but we kept walking him to his field and back every day so he could get used to being outside again. It was a scary moment when we eventually turned him out, but he was fine,” she added.

“I’ve not seen a horse so badly affected that has pulled through to this stage,” says Becky, who has been amazed by Jerry’s progress. “He had neurologic­al deficits, such as a head tilt and eye droop, and weakness on his left-hand side, and it takes time for these pathways to redevelop. But he is now lungeing in walk, trot and canter, trotting over poles and enjoying time in the paddock.”

With regular physiother­apy sessions and steady groundwork, it is hoped that Jerry will be hacking out under saddle by the end of the year. For the Waylands, the greatest reward is seeing his personalit­y re-emerge.

“Jerry is a massive part of our family,” says Sarah. “He could jump 1.05m before, but I can’t imagine that again. But they’re calling him the miracle horse, so who knows? A few months ago, we never thought he would be out in a field again.”

 ??  ?? Jerry before becoming severely ill. The family hope he will be hacking under saddle by the end of the year
Jerry before becoming severely ill. The family hope he will be hacking under saddle by the end of the year
 ??  ?? ‘We had to bring the hospital to him’: IV lines were hung from the rafters, and Jerry received twice-daily veterinary visits and intensive nursing to help him fight the infection
‘We had to bring the hospital to him’: IV lines were hung from the rafters, and Jerry received twice-daily veterinary visits and intensive nursing to help him fight the infection
 ??  ?? Here, Jerry is regaining his confidence about loading. Before diagnosis, hisneurolo­gical system was so badly affected, he was unable to get on the lorry
Here, Jerry is regaining his confidence about loading. Before diagnosis, hisneurolo­gical system was so badly affected, he was unable to get on the lorry

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