Relationship between stable management practices and ocular disease in horses

Author:

Ludwig Claire1,Barr Erin2,Gilger Brian C.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Sciences North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine Raleigh North Carolina USA

2. Equine Ophthalmology Service North Carolina State University College of Veterinary Medicine Raleigh North Carolina USA

Abstract

SummaryBackgroundOcular diseases are common in horses and their occurrence is frequently associated with trauma.ObjectivesThis study aimed to evaluate how stable management practices, such as environment, feeding or use of fly masks, are related to the development of eye diseases, primarily corneal ulceration, in horses.Study designA survey of horse owners in the state of North Carolina was conducted and owners were asked how they managed their horses and the types of eye diseases the horses experienced.MethodsData collected included the primary environment of the horse (stable or pasture), type and method of feeding of hay, use of fly masks and eye diseases that the horses have developed. Correlations between management practices and eye disease were then performed.ResultsOf 446 horses, 161 (36% of total) had been diagnosed with a corneal ulcer, 44 (10%) had multiple occurrences of corneal ulcers, 65 [15%] horses had uveitis and 15 (3%) had immune‐mediated keratitis. Horses that were kept at pasture exclusively were significantly less likely to have had a corneal ulcer than horses kept in a combination of pasture and stalls (p = 0.04). Horses that wore the fly masks year‐round (p < 0.0001) and wore fly masks in both the pasture and stall (p = 0.01) were significantly more likely to have been diagnosed with multiple occurrences of corneal ulcers. There was no significant correlation between types of hay (p = 0.59) or how hay was fed (p = 0.49) with the occurrence of corneal ulceration or other ocular diseases.Main limitationsResults were based on horse owner responses and not medical professionals.ConclusionsHorses kept primarily at pasture have fewer ocular diseases, likely because they sustain less ocular trauma compared to horses kept in stables. How hay is fed does not correlate with the incidence of corneal or other ocular disease.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference15 articles.

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5. Clinical findings associated with blunt ocular trauma in horses: a retrospective analysis;Charnock L.N.;Veterinary Ophthalmology,2022

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