Equine IMHA Acute Dose Calculator
Configured strictly to Equine-Specific Clinical Guidelines
1. Immunosuppressive Plan
📋 Equine Single vs. Dual Therapy Advisor
Check presenting clinical signs to evaluate if concurrent dual protocol is indicated immediately:
2. Mandatory Thromboprophylaxis
📋 Equine Diagnostic & Clinical Guidelines
🔍 True Auto-Agglutination vs. Rouleaux
Equine blood naturally forms prominent **Rouleaux** (stacked coins aggregation), easily mimicking auto-agglutination. You **must** perform a Saline Dilution Test using 1 part blood to 4 or 10 parts saline. Normal rouleaux stacks dissolve instantly, whereas true diagnostic auto-agglutination persists.
🐴 Neonatal Isoerythrolysis (NI) Checks
In newborn foals presenting with acute hemolytic icterus in the first 24-36 hours postpartum, suspect NI. Instantly deny access to maternal colostrum. Support with alternative colostrum or washed maternal RBCs if blood count drops dangerously.
📚 Clinical Decision Guide: Single vs. Dual Protocols ▼
The Equine Corticosteroid Standard: Dexamethasone (IV) is the standard first-line choice during the acute stage, as horses cannot convert oral prednisone efficiently in the liver. Once stable and eating, they can be transitioned to oral Prednisolone.
When to use Dual Therapy (from Day 1): Initiate dual protocols (such as adding supportive low-dose heparin alongside IV dexamethasone) immediately if the horse shows active intravascular hemolysis, severe hypoxia, or sudden catastrophic drops in PCV.
When to use Sequential Therapy: If the patient presents with stable extravascular IMHA, starting with standard corticosteroid monotherapy is highly acceptable. Perform continuous digital pulse assessments and maintain laminitis monitoring.