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Disaster Relief: Emergency Treatment and Management of Horses under Hurricane Conditions

Filed Under:
Publication Number: P3846
View as PDF: P3846.pdf

Horses are often at greater risk for traumatic injury than humans when natural disasters strike because of the conditions under which horses are normally maintained. Stabling may be destroyed or horses may escape from their normal confinements, resulting in traumatic injury.

When these emergency situations arise, veterinarians unfamiliar with equine practice may be asked to help capture and give the horses emergency treatment. The following information serves as a quick reference for those veterinarians.

Containment

Frequently, free-running horses are found in groups, because horses are herd animals by nature. This can complicate the capture process, often forcing you to build an enclosure that you can drive or entice the animals into. Occasionally, you can catch individual animals within the group and lead them to the stabling facility, followed by other members of the group.

Horses you can’t catch may have to be sedated with intramuscular tranquilizers administered with a dart gun. Most city and county animal control departments have dart guns available for this purpose. After you capture any intact male animals (other than unweaned foals), keep them separate from the group.

Housing and Feeding

A stall for each animal is the best housing situation, but this isn’t usually possible after a hurricane. You must build pens from available materials.

You can build safe fences from electrical fencing, using thin gauge wire, a battery-powered electrical source, and available materials. If you use wire fencing, tie strips of cloth along the each wire strand at four- to six-foot intervals for better demarcation of the fence.

Remember, the smaller the group, the more manageable individual animals are. Closely observe the horses immediately after they are confined. If you notice individual animals with aggressive behavior, put them in a separate corral or with a different group of horses. Put severely injured horses in an individual stall if possible.

When horses are stabled in large groups, certain animals may become territorial, denying others access to feed or water if only one source is available. At least two water sources and several feed sources should be available in every corral containing multiple horses.

The horses’ diet will depend upon the availability of feed after the disaster. The feedstuff of choice would be a grass hay, such as coastal bermuda, orchard grass, oat, or timothy, fed at 10 pounds of hay per 450 kg of body-weight, or approximately 1/5 of a bale per horse per day. Unless there are juvenile animals, lactating mares, or severely underweight animals, grain is not necessary and may predispose the horses to laminitis and/or colic.

Animal Identification

Check every horse brought into a central holding facility to see if it carries some form of permanent identification, such as a brand or tattoo. Brands may be located anywhere on the horse, but certain breeds of horses, such as Arabians, may be branded under the mane. Horses that have been on the racetrack will have a tattoo on the inside of their upper lip. If any horse lacks this identification, clip a number into the hair or drill it into the hoof wall as soon as possible.

Keep a picture of each animal on file with a matching identification number. In addition, make close-up photographs of any wounds or other disaster-related injuries.

Management of Traumatic Injuries

Any horse with an injury that has broken the skin should be given both tetanus antitoxin and tetanus toxoid injections. Superficial traumatic injuries respond well to cleansing with a mild disinfectant, such as dilute povidone iodine solution and application of a topical antibiotic dressing.

Wounds heal with less exuberant granulation tissue if you leave them unbandaged, unless they are in an area of excessive motion or tension. Explore deeper wounds and puncture wounds to determine the extent of the wound and to preclude the presence of a foreign body. Evaluate the vascular integrity of the wound area. A loss of local blood supply may impede healing and predispose the wound to infection. Lavage the wound with a sterile saline or dilute povidone iodine solution daily until filled with granulation tissue.

If you suspect a fracture, immobilize the affected limb as well as possible with a multilayer tight wrap of padded material or blankets (such as a Robert-Jones splint) until you can get radiographs. Apply a support wrap to the opposite limb. Keep accurate records of all medical treatments and surgical manipulations.

Medication Doses

Antibiotics

  • Procaine G Penicillin: 20,000 to 50,000 IU/kg IM, BID or SID
  • Trimethoprim-sulfa: 15 to 30 mg/kg PO, BID
  • Gentamicin: 2.2 mg/kg, IV or IM TID or QID
  • Metronidazole: 7.5 to 15 mg/kg PO, QID, or TID
  • Ceftiofur: 2.2 to 4.4 mg/kg IM or IV, BID, or TID

Sedatives

  • Xylazine: 0.25 to 1.0 mg/kg IV or IM
  • Detomidine: 0.01 to 0.02 mg/kg IV or IM
  • Butorphanol: 0.05 to 1.0 mg/kg IV or IM
  • Acepromazine: 0.02 to 0.06 mg/kg IV or IM
  • Ketamine: 2.2 mg/kg IV after xylazine

Anti-inflammatory Drugs

  • Phenylbutazone: 2.2 to 4.4 mg/kg PO or IV, BID, or SID
  • Flunixin meglumine: 0.25 to 1.0 mg/kg IV or IM, SID to TID
  • Dexamethasone: 0.02 to 0.2 mg/kg Im or IV or PO, SID
  • DMSO: 0.5 to 1.0 mg/kg as a 10% soln IV, BID
  • Prednisone: 0.02 to 1.0 mg/kg PO, BID

Miscellaneous

  • Furosemide: 1 to 3 mg/kg IV or IM, SID or BID
  • Tetanus antitoxin: 1500 units IM
  • Tetanus toxoid: 1 ml IM
  • Pentobarbital: 100 mg/kg IV for euthanasia 

Publication 3846 (POD-01-22)

Reviewed by Dr. Carla Huston, Professor and Extension Veterinarian, Pathobiology and Population Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine.

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Authors

Portrait of Dr. Carla L. Huston
Prof/Dir/Enh Cln Educ/Ext Vet
Beef Cattle Health Disaster Management Epidemiology Veterinary Preventive Medicine

Your Extension Experts

Portrait of Mr. Tom Ball
Extension Associate III
Portrait of Ms. Anne Howard Hilbun-Benoit
Extension Instructor
Portrait of Dr. Carla L. Huston
Prof/Dir/Enh Cln Educ/Ext Vet

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