What’s The Deal With Tall Fescue And Broodmares?

If you don't manage an active breeding farm in Central Kentucky, chances are pretty good you've heard of problems with tall fescue grass, but you may not be aware of when or why it can be bad for certain horses.

At its recent client education seminar, Rood + Riddle Equine Hospital's Dr. Maria Schnobrich gave the basics for those of us vaguely wondering whether or not we should be afraid of fescue.

Firstly, Schnobrich said, it's important to understand what it is about the grass that causes problems. The University of Kentucky's Horse Pasture Evaluation Program has yet to find a single pasture that doesn't contain tall fescue; the question is only how much of it shows up in a given field. On average, Schnobrich said UK's data finds it's about 20 percent of a given field, but that can swing wildly depending on the location and management.

“You may have a mixed seeding that you do initially but if the pasture is stressed, the fescue may outgrow the other grasses,” she said. “So while you think initially you may be doing a mixed proportion and have it under control, as you start to see some of the reproductive effects or other things … it's important to think that these pastures are dynamic.”

Fescue can become infected with a fungus called an endophyte which has proven a useful relationship for the grass over time. The presence of the endophyte helps the tall fescue become resistant to drought and pests. Unfortunately, the endophyte will also produce a toxin called ergovaline, which causes decreases in progestin and prolactin in mares. Much is still unknown about the way ergovaline impacts horses, but research indicates its levels are low between January and March in Central Kentucky and may rise astronomically between April and June. There can sometimes be a second spike in the fall. Somewhere between 80 and 100 percent of fescue in the wild is infected with this fungus, but having it on your property doesn't necessarily mean you've got the toxin in your horses' diet.

Most adult horses in work and breeding stallions seem unaffected by ergovaline. Yearlings may demonstrate inhibited growth and more problems with physitis, or growth plate swelling. The biggest problems seem to be in pregnant or nursing mares.

A pregnant mare encountering ergovaline may have a longer gestation (sometimes as long as 13 months – as if pregnancy isn't tough enough already) and then deliver larger than average foals who are not well-muscled. The mares can then produce smaller amounts of colostrum than average, and what they do produce may be of poor quality. The mares may also take longer to come back into heat after foaling than expected. Foals may show symptoms of hyperthyroidism and poor immunity, possibly due to the inferior colostrum quality.

“If you start going through the list and you have a few of these symptoms on your farm, I think it's important to think of fescue,” said Schnobrich.

Pastures can be so dynamic that Schnobrich says sometimes the symptoms may be limited to one field or one barn's worth of mares who happen to be ingesting more tall fescue than horses elsewhere on the same property.

Once a pasture has reached a tipping point with too much fescue, it's not practical to try removing all of it and starting over. Instead, pasture experts suggest trying to dilute the amount of dangerous fescue with something else. There are two varieties of fescue which cannot become infected with the fungus, or managers could add clover or alfalfa seed into their mix. Keeping pastures short and mowing before seed heads form can also help reduce the amount of ergovaline a mare might encounter.

Schnobrich also suggested managers feed extra grass or alfalfa hay during the times of the year when ergovaline is most likely to spike as a way to dilute how much fresh grass the horses will eat. If you can take a pregnant mare off a field with tall fescue and have her graze elsewhere, Schnobrich suggests doing it somewhere between 30 and 90 days prior to foaling.

If you're worried you're already stuck with too much tall fescue, Schnobrich also said administering domperidone beginning 30 days from foaling may also help combat the impacts of the ergovaline.

The post What’s The Deal With Tall Fescue And Broodmares? appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Ask Your Veterinarian Presented By Kentucky Performance Products: When To Perform A C-Section On A Pregnant Mare

Veterinarians at Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital answer your questions about sales and healthcare of Thoroughbred auction yearlings, weanlings, 2-year-olds and breeding stock.

Question: Why and when might a veterinarian decide to perform a C-section on a pregnant mare?

Dr. Rolf Embertson, Rood and Riddle Equine Hospital: Most C-sections are performed as an emergency procedure in the horse. The procedure is usually performed when other methods to deliver a foal have failed. C-sections are infrequently performed during colic surgery on a term broodmare and infrequently performed as an elective procedure in the mare. Indications for the latter would include a compromised birth canal due to a previous pelvic fracture or soft tissue trauma, a compromised cervix, previous episodes of postpartum hemorrhage, and previous difficult dystocias.

Dr. Rolf Embertson

Before discussing success rates, a basic understanding of dystocia in the mare is warranted. Dystocia means difficult birth. In the mare, once the chorioallantoic membrane ruptures (the mare breaks water), a foal is usually delivered in about 20 minutes. If a foal is not delivered within about 45 minutes, the probability of foal survival starts to rapidly decrease. Thus, this can become a true emergency where minutes can make the difference in survival of the foal. Although less of an emergency for the mare, her reproductive future and even her life may also be at risk. The goal should be to deliver a live foal in a manner resulting in a live, reproductively sound mare.

There are essentially four procedures used to resolve dystocia in a mare. Assisted vaginal delivery (AVD) is when the mare is awake, possibly sedated, and is assisted in vaginal delivery of an intact foal. This is done primarily on the farm. Controlled vaginal delivery (CVD) is when the mare is anesthetized and the clinician is in complete control of delivering an intact foal vaginally. This is usually done in a hospital environment. Fetotomy is when a dead foal is reduced to more than one part to remove the foal vaginally from an awake or anesthetized mare. This can be done at the farm or in a hospital. C-section is when the foal is removed through an abdominal and uterine incision. This is best performed in a hospital. These procedures are used as needed to produce the most favorable result.

The success rate for live foals and live mares that go through a dystocia is significantly better when the farms are close to a hospital that can perform these procedures. This is primarily due to the duration of the dystocia prior to resolution, although this can be influenced by other factors. Realistic example: A mare breaks water and 15 to 20 minutes later, the foaling attendants realize they can't correct the head back posture of the foal. Within five to 10 minutes (now 20 to 30 minutes since the water broke) the mare is loaded on the trailer, the mare arrives at the hospital in 15 to 40 minutes (now 35 to 70 minutes into the foaling attempt). A brief exam, IV catheter placement, anesthetic induction within five to 10 minutes (now 40 to 80 minutes overall), attempt CVD for five to 15 minutes (now 45 to 95 minutes). If the attempt is not successful, the team will perform C-section, foal is delivered in 15 to 20 minutes from when the decision was made (now 60 to 115 minutes from when water broke).

Dystocia mares that are sent to our hospital go directly to a dedicated induction stall. The mare is anesthetized, her hind limbs hoisted so her pelvis is about three feet off the floor. The foal is examined, repositioned, the mare dropped to the floor, and the foal pulled out of the mare. This CVD procedure is successful in resolving about 75 percent of hospital dystocias. About 25 percent of the hospital dystocias are resolved by C-section.

Following CVD, about 39 percent of those foals survive to discharge from our hospital and about 94 percent of those mares survive to discharge from our hospital. Following C-section about 30 percent of those foals survive to discharge from our hospital and about 85 pecent of the mares survive to discharge from our hospital.

Elective C-sections have a better success rate. There is about a 95 percent survival to discharge rate for foals and about a 95 percent survival to discharge rate for mares.

Dr. Rolf Embertson graduated from Michigan State University with a Bachelor of Science in Zoology in 1976. He also attended Michigan State where he graduated from Veterinary School in 1979 followed by an internship at Illinois Equine Hospital. Dr. Embertson completed a Large Animal Surgery Residency at the University of Florida, followed by an Equine Surgery Residency at The Ohio State University. In 1986, he became a Diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Surgeons. Dr. Embertson is a surgeon and shareholder at Rood & Riddle.  

The post Ask Your Veterinarian Presented By Kentucky Performance Products: When To Perform A C-Section On A Pregnant Mare appeared first on Horse Racing News | Paulick Report.

Source of original post

Keeneland November Kicks Off Wednesday

The sales action moves across town Wednesday with bidding on the first session of Keeneland November starting at 1 p.m. The 10-day auction, which runs through Nov. 19, opens with a single-session Book 1 comprised of 229 mares and weanlings, five of which were late supplements. The sale has five books in total and the last half of the final day will be dedicated to 285 Horses of Racing Age.

“We have a lot of optimism,” said Cormac Breathnach, Keeneland's Director of Sales. “We had an electric atmosphere starting in Book 1 of September and continuing through the very last day. We are seeing through the credit application process, the things we are hearing on the grounds and people coming over now that borders are open that the demand that we saw in September is going to roll over with renewed interest in breeding stock and weanlings to pinhook.”

The September sale also boasted a stronger middle market than the industry had seen in recent years, which is likely to trickle down into this auction.

“I think the middle market is going to be extremely strong,” Claiborne's Walker Hancock said. “Based off the September sales, you could buy a mare for $20,000 or $30,000 and sell the foal for at least double that. We are really seeing an increase in the strength of that part of the market, which is good for everybody.”

The Breeders' Cup provided some timely updates to a few members of the KEENOV catalogue. Charmaine's Mia (The Factor) finished third in Saturday's GI Breeders' Cup Turf Sprint and is offered here as Hip 172. Taylor Made offers an Audible half-sister to GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies runner-up Juju's Warrior (Hip 1801) and H idden Brook has a Hard Spun half-brother (Hip 251) to GI Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies Turf third Haughty (Empire Maker).

“There is a lot of depth in the catalogue and mares in foal to exciting sires like Into Mischief,” Breathnach said. “Charmaine's Mia had a massive update on an already great page and [GISW] Paris Lights (Curlin) was a supplement, as was Jazz Tune (Johannesburg), dam of [GISW] Rattle N Roll (Connect).”

The November Sale is also known as a place too buy racehorses and they have reformatted that portion of the sale this year, placing it in a single session on the auction's final day.

“A new wrinkle we have for this year is we split the Horses of Racing Age section off onto the last day just to segregate it and we can have a later entry of supplement,” Breathnach said. “Even after scratches, we are expecting about 220 to get here middle of next week. We are hearing great feedback about that maneuver.”

Last year's Keeneland November was topped by Grade I winner Concrete Rose (Twirling Candy), who summoned $1.95 million from Larry Best's Oxo Equine. Best also purchased the second highest-priced offering, $1.9-million Indian Miss (Indian Charlie), who is the dam of champion Mitole (Eskendereya) and GISW Hot Rod Charlie (Oxbow). She sold in foal to red-hot sire Into Mischief.

The Triple Crown-winning duo of Justify and American Pharoah were responsible for the most expensive weanlings at the 2020 renewal of KEENOV. A colt from the first crop of Justify brought $600,000 from Donato Lanni and an American Pharoah half-brother to MGISW Jackie's Warrior (Maclean's Music) summoned the same price from Coolmore's M.V. Magnier.

At the 2020 auction, a total of 2,287 head sold, including post-sales, for a gross of $157,822,800. The average was $69,009 and the median was $25,000.

The Keeneland November Sale runs from Nov. 10 to Nov. 19 with the first session starting at 1 p.m. and the remaining nine sessions beginning at 10 a.m.

The post Keeneland November Kicks Off Wednesday appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

BBAG to Hold Christmas Online Sale

The inaugural BBAG Christmas Online Sale will begin on Nov. 26 and bidding will close on Nov. 28. Horses of all ages are permitted for the auction which is identical in format to the spring online auction, BBAG announced on Monday. Horses do not have to travel to the sales ring in Iffezheim. Videos and photos of lots will be available in the online catalogue after publication. The deadline to register is Friday, Nov. 18. For more information, please visit the BBAG website.

The post BBAG to Hold Christmas Online Sale appeared first on TDN | Thoroughbred Daily News | Horse Racing News, Results and Video | Thoroughbred Breeding and Auctions.

Source of original post

Verified by MonsterInsights