Urinary issue ... we're stumped ...
Posted: Mon Jul 16, 2007 6:34 pm
OKay - here goes - I hope that I remember everything ...
Was in my mare's stall today picking it out when she peed. This was the weirdest pee I have EVER seen - it was a yellowy-orange colour (like the colour of the inside of a Cadbury's Creme Egg), thick like a milkshake and totally thick and opaque - more like pus than urine ...
At first I immediately thought of a vaginal infection, but nope - it was pee and not vaginal discharge at all ...
And it started dribbling down the inside of her bum cheeks and left yellowish streaks down her bay coat and then dried and crystallized like if you had salty water that dried on your skin and left a residue
Phoned the vet and he suggested starting her on liquid Sulfatrim (TMS) which I had so gave her 30 cc's of that and then went back into the stall with a sterile container, whistling like mad to try and get her to pee again ...
Her manure is fine - normal to bordering on soft - so she doesnt appear to be deydrated at all. Skin *pinch* test come back normal - so again - indication that she is properly hydrated.
There is no odour to it at all. You know how if a horse IS dehydrated and their urine is a deep yellowish brown colour, it is has a very strong ammonia smell - that is not the case here at all
So - I DO end up getting a sample after I whistle for awhile and this time it is still thick, still very opaque, but more of a deep deep yellow colour instead of that orangey yellow tinge ...
Drive it like mad over to the vet so they can spin and test it and in the 10 minutes it takes me to get there, chalky sediment has settled on the bottom half of the container - almost like if you had dissolved chalk in a yellowish liquid and then let it settle for awhile???
The vet spun and tested the liquid. Negative for everything - blood in the urine, white blood cell count, anything/everything they could test for, so they then tested the sediment and found the same thing - negative right across the spectrum of all tests.
So - she is not harboring a urinary tract infection that we can tell, she is bright, eating normally and acting totally normal. She has never been a huge water drinker, but she goes through 2-3 buckets in her stall and however much she drinks outside with the other mare and her foal from the water trough during the day ...
Nothing has changed - not her feed components, the water, the hay, nothing.
The vet recommended adding a tablespoon of salt to her meals twice per day which we are going to try but she is such a picky eater anyhow, the salt might be enough to back her off eating totally ... to try and increase her water consumption but I keep thinking if she wasnt getting enough water, we'd see it in the way of hard-as-golf-balls manure and in her skin test as well, which we are not
Plus I bought some tube electrolytes and gave her a 25ML dose of that tonight as well ...
Has anyone got the FOGGIEST of ideas what this might be and/or have you come across anything like this before?
IN all my years around horses and as many as I have owned I have NEVER seen anythng like this, nor has the Barn Owner and the vets seemed pretty stumped as well ...
Any thoughts on what else to test?
I am concerned that her kidneys may be overloaded / taxed trying to filter out this chalky stuff going through them
Now - she may as well be right and rain tomorrow, never to have this problem re-occur again. Who knows - but hopefully someone can shed some light on this one ...
Thanks a bunch, as always ...
Was in my mare's stall today picking it out when she peed. This was the weirdest pee I have EVER seen - it was a yellowy-orange colour (like the colour of the inside of a Cadbury's Creme Egg), thick like a milkshake and totally thick and opaque - more like pus than urine ...
At first I immediately thought of a vaginal infection, but nope - it was pee and not vaginal discharge at all ...
And it started dribbling down the inside of her bum cheeks and left yellowish streaks down her bay coat and then dried and crystallized like if you had salty water that dried on your skin and left a residue
Phoned the vet and he suggested starting her on liquid Sulfatrim (TMS) which I had so gave her 30 cc's of that and then went back into the stall with a sterile container, whistling like mad to try and get her to pee again ...
Her manure is fine - normal to bordering on soft - so she doesnt appear to be deydrated at all. Skin *pinch* test come back normal - so again - indication that she is properly hydrated.
There is no odour to it at all. You know how if a horse IS dehydrated and their urine is a deep yellowish brown colour, it is has a very strong ammonia smell - that is not the case here at all
So - I DO end up getting a sample after I whistle for awhile and this time it is still thick, still very opaque, but more of a deep deep yellow colour instead of that orangey yellow tinge ...
Drive it like mad over to the vet so they can spin and test it and in the 10 minutes it takes me to get there, chalky sediment has settled on the bottom half of the container - almost like if you had dissolved chalk in a yellowish liquid and then let it settle for awhile???
The vet spun and tested the liquid. Negative for everything - blood in the urine, white blood cell count, anything/everything they could test for, so they then tested the sediment and found the same thing - negative right across the spectrum of all tests.
So - she is not harboring a urinary tract infection that we can tell, she is bright, eating normally and acting totally normal. She has never been a huge water drinker, but she goes through 2-3 buckets in her stall and however much she drinks outside with the other mare and her foal from the water trough during the day ...
Nothing has changed - not her feed components, the water, the hay, nothing.
The vet recommended adding a tablespoon of salt to her meals twice per day which we are going to try but she is such a picky eater anyhow, the salt might be enough to back her off eating totally ... to try and increase her water consumption but I keep thinking if she wasnt getting enough water, we'd see it in the way of hard-as-golf-balls manure and in her skin test as well, which we are not
Plus I bought some tube electrolytes and gave her a 25ML dose of that tonight as well ...
Has anyone got the FOGGIEST of ideas what this might be and/or have you come across anything like this before?
IN all my years around horses and as many as I have owned I have NEVER seen anythng like this, nor has the Barn Owner and the vets seemed pretty stumped as well ...
Any thoughts on what else to test?
I am concerned that her kidneys may be overloaded / taxed trying to filter out this chalky stuff going through them
Now - she may as well be right and rain tomorrow, never to have this problem re-occur again. Who knows - but hopefully someone can shed some light on this one ...
Thanks a bunch, as always ...