
To administer sulfa orally, it is often easiest to mash the pills into a powder and add it to the horse’s grain. Other options include making the powder into a paste and injecting orally (like worming, using a syringe without a needle), or adding karo syrup to the paste and adding that to the horse’s grain. Of course, follow your own vet’s instructions for your horse.
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The condition
diagnosed as an “internal abscess” is that of a chronic walled-off infection
usually located in a horse’s abdomen or chest cavity. The general symptoms that
a horse with this condition presents with are weight loss, less than a normal
appetite and general malaise.
Occasionally, some of
these horses are noticed to have a compromised way of moving. They just aren’t
“themselves,” the owner says. On initial examination, some of these horses will
have a low-grade fever (i.e., 101 degrees Fahrenheit in the morning instead of
99-100).
When I see a horse
with these general symptoms and no other obvious reason for them, I will take a
blood sample for what is termed an inflammatory hemogram. The results will tell
me if the horse is suffering from a chronic infection.
One specific thing to
look for in the blood is a rise in the total white blood-cell count. The type of
white blood cell that goes up is also important. The neutrophil is the white
cell that rises in the face of chronic infection. The horse will also often be
slightly anemic (with a lower than normal red blood-cell count) due to
suppression of the bone marrow by toxic products of chronic
infection.
Fibrinogen is a
plasma protein that goes up with chronic inflammation and can be an indicator of
the size or activity of the walled-off infection. Oftentimes, the history and
results of the blood count are all one has to go on to make the diagnosis and
initiate treatment. With high-tech ultrasonography or radiology one can
sometimes image the lesion in the chest or abdomen.
Treatment is based on
long-term antibiotic therapy with periodic blood tests to measure the response.
By long-term therapy, I mean at least one month, but perhaps longer depending on
the response. I usually treat these horses orally with a drug like Trimethoprim
sulfa, sometimes supplemented with a drug called rifampin that aids in
penetrating the capsule that builds up around these abscesses.
I prefer the oral
route of treatment when possible to avoid the problems associated with
injections daily for that length of time. These lesions have taken a long time
to develop and will take a lengthy treatment period to
resolve.
The general theory is
that these lesions can start by an episode of bacteremia (bacteria in the
bloodstream) that can and does occur from time to time. If you have enough
resilient bacteria that filter out in an internal lymph node, they can colonize,
reproduce and form the nidus of the infection. It doesn’t make the horse
noticeably ill initially, but as the lesion grows and produces more toxins, the
symptoms I described become evident.