Horse Owner IMHA Guide
Caring for a horse recovering from immune-mediated haemolytic anaemia requires systematic observations, strict stable management, and rapid identification of corticosteroid risks. This reference manual guides you through critical checks and daily logs.
🩺 Daily Equine Vital Assessments
Because of their large vascular volume, horses with IMHA must be assessed twice daily for signs of sudden haemolytic crises or cardiovascular collapse. Log these baseline measures at regular times.
Check Mucous Membranes with Care
Gently pull back your horse's lip to inspect the gums, or check the lining of the nostrils. They should be a healthy pale pink. If they are white, grayish, or yellow (icterus), contact your equine veterinarian immediately. Check capillary refill time by pressing the gum; it should return to pink in under two seconds.
Monitor Urine Color & Volume
Normal equine urine is yellow and often appears cloudy or thick due to natural calcium carbonate crystals and mucus. However, red, reddish-brown, or dark tea-colored urine indicates severe intravascular destruction of red blood cells. Check stable bedding or catch urine streams when possible.
Learn to Palpate Digital Pulses
Lightly run your fingers over the back of the fetlock joint to locate the digital arteries. A healthy horse has a faint, hard-to-find pulse. If you feel a strong, throbbing, or "bounding" digital pulse, this indicates severe inflammation inside the hooves and is an early indicator of laminitis.
🐎 Stable Management & Hygiene Standards
Horses on high-dose immunosuppressive corticosteroids have compromised defense systems and are susceptible to environmental pathogens.
- ✓ Strict Stall Rest: Restrict exercise completely unless explicitly allowed by your vet. Straining can cause critical spikes in blood pressure and place structural strain on hypoxic muscles and joints.
- ✓ Deep, Supportive Bedding: Keep the stall bedded deeply with clean, dry wood shavings or supportive straw. This absorbs waste and cushions the hooves, reducing laminitis risks and pressure sores.
- ✓ Salmonella Prevention: High-dose steroids can prompt asymptomatic horses to shed Salmonella. Clean stalls daily, use dedicated boots, and disinfect muck forks to prevent cross-contamination.
⚖️ Corticosteroid Laminitis: Risk Awareness
Corticosteroids like Dexamethasone or Prednisolone are critical to stop the immune system from destroying blood cells, but they carry a high risk of triggering laminitis (founder) in equine patients.
Early Warning Signs
- • Warm or hot hoof walls
- • Bounding, strong digital pulses
- • Shifting weight from foot to foot
- • Reluctance to turn or move
- • Pointing the front toes forward
Emergency Status
- • Standing in a "rocked back" stance
- • Refusal to stand or rise from bed
- • Sweating, high heart rate, or shaking
- • Constant shifting or pacing in pain
- • Complete loss of appetite
This guide is strictly educational and designed to help you work closely with your veterinarian. Do not use this tool to replace active clinical consults, change medication protocols, or ignore physical exams.
Daily Equine Assessment
Input your horse's vitals now to receive an automated safety screening checklist based on standard equine recovery signs.
Enter your daily values above. This box will evaluate your results immediately.
🚨 Equine Emergency Red Flags
Contact your equine veterinarian or animal hospital immediately if your horse exhibits any of these signs:
- • White, gray, or dark yellow gums
- • Bounding digital pulses with hot hoof walls
- • "Rocked back" stance, putting weight on heels
- • Refusal to rise or stand for long periods
- • Red, dark brown, or tea-colored urine