Chronic inflammatory small bowel disease has an increased prevalence in sport horses. The disorder is associated with intermittent colic, weight loss, poor performance and anemia.
Is it Coping or is it a Vice? A Review of Cribbing, Weaving and Other Stereotypic Behaviors - On January 22, 2013 at 7PM EST, Dr. Carissa Wickens of My Horse University and eXtension HorseQuest will offer this free monthly webcast.Â
Colic is the number one killer of horses (other than old age!)Â As a result, Equine Guelph is developing a new colic prevention program and we need your help!Â
The Crusade Against Equine Colic has designated June as Equine Colic Awareness Month. it is the Crusade's goal to save as many horses as possible from deadly and debilitating bouts of equine colic through educating you â the horse men and women
The Humane Society of the United States will be hosting its first national equine event, Honoring the Horse, at the New Orleans Convention Center on March 31 and April 1, 2015.
Researchers of the Free University of Amsterdam and Utrecht University in the Netherlands have now identified gluten sensitivity as a potential cause of equine chronic inflammatory small bowel disease in sport horses.
âISF has generously provided a $15,000 grant to underwrite the fertility control portion of the program, a vaccine aimed at safely and humanely managing the Virginia Range horses.â
Cash prizes will be awarded to the top four contestants in Equine Affaire’s Versatile Horse and Rider Competition with the first-place team receiving $2,500 and the title of Versatile Horse and Rider Competition Champion, so enter by 9/8/2017
Preventive care through annual vaccination is the only way to protect horses against rabies - a fatal disease once clinical signs appear.
All core diseases can be devastating to horses, and they're not eradicated.