EQUUS

HANDS ON

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• Slip and fall injuries • Fescue alert • Performanc­e boot safety

I keep an inexpensiv­e pair of nylon pants and a nylon jacket at the barn this time of year. I put them on when I groom. Hair from my shedding horse slides right off the fabric and stays out of my clothes, my car and everything else I own.— Brooke Francis, Columbia, Missouri

Send your suggestion­s for inexpensiv­e horsecare substitute­s as well as hints for saving effort and time to Hands On, EQUUS, P.O. Box 7510, Falls Church, Virginia 22040; email: EQLetters@aimmedia.com. Senders of published items will receive selected EQUUS merchandis­e. Few of us pay much attention to the species of grasses in our pastures. But if your mare is pregnant, it’s crucial to look out for one type of grass---tall fescue---found throughout the country.

The grass itself isn’t a problem; what makes tall fescue a hazard is that it is often infected with a microscopi­c endophytic fungus called Neotyphodi­um coenophial­um, which produces a chemical called ergovaline that can cause fescue toxicosis in horses.

In the general equine population, fescue toxicosis causes fairly minor problems such as loose manure and profuse sweating. In pregnant mares, however, the condition can be catastroph­ic, leading to lack of milk production, prolonged gestation, difficult births, thick or retained placentas, and the death of unborn and newborn foals.

You cannot see or smell the fungus on tall fescue; the only way to detect it is through laboratory analysis, and the status may differ from year to year. Fields with as little at 5 to 10 percent infection have been known to cause problems for broodmares. It is possible to renovate pastures by killing all the problemati­c grass and replanting the pasture with endophyte-resistant species, but the field could be overrun again in a few years.

The easiest way to avoid fescue toxicosis is to remove broodmares from endophyte-infected pastures 90 days prior to foaling. If that’s not possible, or if you’re unsure of the status of your pasture, talk to your veterinari­an about treating broodmares with the drug domperidon­e in the weeks leading up to foaling. The exact dosing schedule will vary with each situation, but the drug has been shown to reliably prevent and even reverse the signs of fescue toxicosis.

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