Page 65 - The Veterinary Care of the Horse
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•    corticosteroids to reduce the inflammation of the gut.



  VetBooks.ir  Treatment of young animals not showing signs but sharing the same grazing has to be done

        with  care.  Removal  of  adult  worms  from  the  gut  lumen  may  stimulate  large  numbers  of
        larvae  to  emerge  from  the  gut  wall  at  once  and  actually  trigger  the  onset  of  severe  and

        possibly fatal diarrhoea. These horses should be closely monitored after being wormed and
        treated  at  once  if  diarrhoea  develops.  Some  severely  affected  animals  recover  over  a  2–3
        month period but the mortality rate can be as high as 50%.



        LARGE STRONGYLES (LARGE REDWORM) e.g. Strongylus vulgaris

        Adult size and colour 1.4 – 2.5 cm (           in), red in colour (Figure 2.16).










































        Figure 2.16 Large strongyles


        Life Cycle The adult worms of St. vulgaris live in the large intestine, attached to the gut wall.

        Here they cause damage leading to blood and protein loss. They also release chemicals which
        affect the normal movement of the gut. The adult worms lay eggs which pass out on to the

        pasture in the faeces. Infective larvae develop from the eggs and when these are ingested,
        they burrow through the gut wall, into the intestinal arteries. They cause inflammation within
        the blood vessels and the formation of blood clots which can cause loss of the normal blood
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