Fall 2014
News &Notes
Vaccination Clinic Schedule
TCVM: What is it? Does it Work?
Fall Vaccination Clinic Schedule
Fall exams
include flu/rhino booster vaccination and deworming or fecal examination and sheath
cleaning for geldings. Many of your
horses also are due for annual dentistry.
To reserve an
appointment, call the office and leave:
- Name, Phone #, Clinic Date
- Number of Animals, and Services requested.
- We will return
your call three days before your clinic with an estimated time of arrival
at your address. Please be sure horses
are caught and haltered 30 minutes beforehand!
Location Date
Rancho Haven/Sierra Ranchos1 Sat
Sep 6
Rancho Haven/Sierra Ranchos2 Fri Sep 12
Rancho Haven/Sierra Ranchos2 Fri Sep 12
Red Rock North/Silver Knolls 1 Sat
Sep 6
Red Rock North/Silver Knolls 2 Fri
Sep 26
Span Springs/Palomino Valley 1 Sat
Sep 13
Span Springs/Palomino Valley 2 Sun
Sep 28
Antelope/Golden/Lemmon Valley 1 Sun Sep 14
Antelope/Golden/Lemmon
Valley 2 Fri Sep 26
South & West Reno 1 Sat Sep 27
South & West Reno 1 Sat Sep 27
Discounted Price List – Clinic days only
Farm
Call/Fall Exam $18.00
West
Nile $32.00
FluRhino $28.00
Rabies $21.00
Tetanus/
Encephalitis $18.00
Intranasal
Strangles $32.00
Ivermectin
Deworm $14.00
Coggins
Test $27.00
Sheath
Clean w/sedation $45.00
Fecal
parasite exam $18.00
Oral
Exam (w/o sedation) No charge!
Equine Dentistry: Why? When? How?
Why? Because horses are no longer grazers.
Many of you have asked me “how do the Mustangs survive
without dental work?” Here’s the answer: they chew more. The equine tooth
evolved some 25 million years ago in response to changes in the earth’s
vegetation. Available forage went from soft leaves to tough, fibrous grasses.
In order to adequately break down this material, the horse developed hypsodont
teeth, which erupt continuously
throughout life. Each tooth is worn down by rubbing against an opposing
tooth, creating an ever changing biting surface with ongoing wear of these
surfaces determined by the horse’s diet and chew cycle.
Three factors contribute to wear of the horse’s teeth: the
interaction between the two biting surfaces, the time spent chewing and the
nature of the material being chewed. Research has shown that horses at pasture
chew more and with more lateral (side to side) motion than horses fed a mixed
hay/grain diet. Specifically, horses eating hay chew 58-66 times per minute vs.
horses at pasture which chew 100-105 times per minute! In addition, horses
eating a hay only diet take 16 hours to chew their daily ration while those on
a hay/grain mix diet only need 6 hours to chew their daily feed.
So our performance horses chew slower, for less time, and
less effectively than their mustang counterparts. Therefore, they don’t do a
good job of floating their own teeth, and small dental abnormalities that would
self-correct on a tough grass mustang diet become serious dental issues without
regular dental care in our horses living in confinement.
When? Once
a year beginning at 2 years old.
Prevention is the key to healthy dentition as your horse ages. Because their teeth erupt throughout life, and very few horses are born with a perfectly balanced bite, small imbalances become BIG imbalances as years pass. The horse only has so much tooth, and with advanced age each tooth pushes to the surface and eventually falls out. The most common occlusal problem encountered is a wave mouth, where the biting surface becomes a roller coaster ride instead of a level grinding plane, with some very long upper teeth opposed by very short lower teeth. The only way to correct the wave is to shorten the longer teeth. It can become impossible to achieve this in older horses with limited remaining tooth and poorly maintained bites. EARLY AND REGULAR dental care are the keys to healthy teeth as your horse ages. If you wait until you notice weight loss, difficulty chewing, or dropping food (quidding) to have your horse’s teeth examined, it may be too late.
How? Dr. C prefers hand floats!
During a tooth float Dr. Chrysann will carefully reduce any
dominant teeth and level the chewing surface with a titanium coated tooth
float. Dominant teeth create and are created by abnormalities in the chewing
surface, or dental arcade which worsen over time and impede chewing and normal
jaw movements. Some common configurations she may correct are hooks, ramps,
transverse ridges and a wave which is caused by multiple dominant teeth. She
will then adjust the alignment of the incisors, as small changes in the
incisors will make a large difference in the occlusion at the back of the
mouth. The specialized hand floats which Dr. Collatos uses are exceptionally
sharp, and allow her to carefully balance each tooth in the mouth individually.
The use of motorized dentistry tools has become common in
equine practice, and these tools are necessary in some cases of neglected
mouths with severe bite abnormalities.
However, in the regularly maintained mouth, the use of motorized tools
is unnecessary, and can cause permanent damage to teeth. Prolonged grinding with motorized dental
tools can create intense heat due to high rotational speed. Research studies
have shown that temperatures reached with high speed (12,000 rpm) motorized
floats can destroy dental pulp cells with resulting permanent damage to the
tooth. In addition, it is very easy to
“overfloat” or remove excessive tooth material, with motorized tools. Horses teeth are NOT smooth or rounded
naturally, and the tearing and grinding action of normal anatomical sharp
borders are the essential first step in the digestive process.
When performed correctly, the goal of equine dentistry is
to balance the horse’s bite while leaving the natural contours of the tooth
intact. This ensures longevity of a functional bite as your horse ages,
reducing the need for costly senior diets.
It also allows free movement of the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) which
insures not only correct chewing of food, but correct alignment of the head and
neck. Hock soreness and back pain can be
the result of a poorly balanced mouth in performance horses!
TCVM – Are you a
believer?
Dr. Chrysann is learning the practice of Traditional
Chinese Veterinary Medicine (TCVM), with an emphasis on Acupuncture. Does it work in horses? Yes, it does, when
performed correctly, with an accurate and appropriate diagnosis. TCVM is based on the ancient concept that
energy follows specific anatomic pathways, called meridians. Meridians have now been mapped using modern
scientific methods. If a radio signal is
introduced at one acupuncture point, it accumulates at other points along that meridian, but NOT at points on other
meridians. Also, MRI brain images have
shown that pain related acupuncture points activate specific pain-associated
brainstem regions, while sham points do not.
Join Dr. C in expanding our ability to keep our horses healthy and comfortable by using TCVM and acupuncture.
Make your Fall Clinic appointment today, and don’t forget
your dental exam!