
“Doc – Do Mares Get Milk Fever Like Cows
Do After They Calve?”
© A.J. Neumann, D.V.M.
published in The Draft Horse
Journal, Spring 2002
They sure do. The condition in the mare
is called “eclampsia.” It probably is one of
the most under-diagnosed conditions following foaling in
the mare.
Postparturient eclampsia is much more common in the draft
horse than in the light horse breeds. In my experience I have
seen and treated many cases in the draft mares; very, very
few in light horse mares, and not a single case in a pony mare.
It may occur in pony mares, but I have never seen a case in
these breeds.
Eclampsia can occur in a mare anytime after foaling, up through
weaning. One time I diagnosed and treated the condition in
a big Belgian mare about one week before she foaled. Her case
was very different, in that I treated her for two more foalings.
It occurred the same way, just about seven to ten days prior
to foaling.
Generally speaking, however, eclampsia will occur in the mare
seven to fourteen days after foaling.
So what do we see happening in these postparturient mares
as they develop eclampsia?
The first symptom a sharp-eyed horse person will notice is
that the animal seems to be a “little nervous.” It
may act anxious and be very restless, moving about the stall
or paddock as if it wants to leave the foal and just go somewhere
else. One may notice rapid breathing, and occasionally the
mare will sweat lightly.
At this point, the animal may often show signs of colic. It
will lie down, stretch out, roll up and look at its flank,
then get up, only to walk around and repeat the process again.
Another set of symptoms may follow the initial stage of anxiety.
The animal may appear to walk slightly “stiff.” This
may be followed in an hour, up to two hours, with a staggering
gait. The mare will fall to the ground and is unable to regain
her feet. The head and neck become extended, as well as the
feet and legs. The latter may be rigid, or the animal may be
making feeble running motions.
Sometimes the entire musculature may be hard and rigid, with
short periods of relaxation. Occasionally the affected mare
will be found down, unable to rise, and she will show periodic
spasms of the muscles or convulsions.
Just before the animal goes down, its breathing becomes labored,
and the body temperature may rise to 105 or 106 degrees Fahrenheit.
At this stage of the game, the pulse becomes very rapid and
weak.
The total time elapsed from the onset of the first symptoms
to the “down stage” could be from one hour up to
twelve or fifteen hours.
If one has time, a blood sample can be taken from the patient
and a blood calcium level test performed. In the draft mare,
the normal blood calcium level is 9 to 15 mg per 100 ml, the
average being 12 mg. The stricken mare may have blood calcium
as low as 4 to 7 mg per 100 ml. It is also interesting to note
that while the blood calcium level is low, the phosphorus blood
level will be high. It is a very good idea to check the blood
phosphorus level as well as the blood calcium level when running
the blood sample taken from the mare.
Most veterinarians cannot take a laboratory with them into
the country when making calls. I learned a long time ago to
kind of fly by the seat of my pants. I have found a diagnostic
symptom that is present in these afflicted mares, as well as
in the cow with milk fever and in the bitch with eclampsia.
It is the reflex time of the pupil of the eye when a bright
spot of light is focused on it.
Take a pen light, and focus it on the eye. Those mares with
the eclampsia syndrome will have a very retarded constriction
of the pupil of the eye. Now, don’t be so foolish as
to ask me what the length of time is! Try your light on normal
horses’ eyes. Get a feeling for the pupil constriction
time. Then when you try it on the suspected eclampsia mare,
you will immediately recognize the fact that the pupil is slow
in constricting.
The history and symptoms of the patient, including the slow
constriction of the pupil in the eye, should be diagnostic
of eclampsia, or so – called “milk fever” of
the mare.
The treatment is easy. I have never lost one of these afflicted
mares, treated while undergoing an acute attack. Calcium gluconate
in a 20 percent solution is given very slowly intravenously
to the patient. If the mare is down, the foal should be removed
until the mare is on her feet. A dose of 750,000 to 1,000,000
units of vitamin D is also administered into the muscle of
the hip of the mare.
Occasionally the calcium gluconate solution will have to be
administered more than once to secure complete recovery. When
the mare has recovered, her grain ration is fortified with
a correct balanced mineral and vitamin D. I have never had
to wean a foal from a mare that has suffered from eclampsia.
I believe the condition can be prevented to a large extent
by providing an adequate ration, complete with the necessary
amounts of calcium, phosphorus, and vitamin D, to the pregnant
mare during gestation, and on through the nursing period.
It is interesting to note that the old literature on horse
diseases, lameness, etc., contains no mention of so-called
milk fever or eclampsia. Yet, my old mentor, Dr. Roach, (who
graduated in 1902) told me he treated this condition successfully
in some mares after foaling with large doses of bone meal and
codliver oil given orally. The downed mare was tubed, he said,
and given a solution made of bone meal and water.
A veterinarian called me a few months ago concerning a draft
mare (that was nursing a foal) which appeared to be foundered,
as she was walking stiff and seemed to be sore on her front
feet and legs. He said he was not acquainted with the draft
horse, but he had a good light horse clientele. After listening
to the history and symptoms of the animal, I suspected the
mare might have eclampsia. I instructed him to get a pen light
and do the eye test, and I told him if the pupil was slow in
contracting down, to give the mare some calcium solution slowly
in the vein.
He called back and told me the eye test was positive for eclampsia,
and he gave the calcium intravenously after making the diagnosis.
Recovery of the “foundered” mare was almost instantaneous.
So I often wonder how many draft mares suffering from eclampsia,
but with symptoms often mistaken for founder or acute colic,
have been mistakenly diagnosed with such, by well-meaning veterinarians
without draft horse experience. Also, it is one thing to suspect
eclampsia two to four weeks after foaling, but how about the
nursing mare who is found down in the paddock early in the
morning, three months after foaling?
Give her the old eye test; it may separate the sheep from
the goats. |