YOU ARE OBSERVING
Eye, Bleeding from Eye
Summary
Eye injuries are always potentially serious.
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Code Red
Call Your Vet Immediately, Even Outside Business Hours- If you notice any change in appearance of the eye itself.
- Most eye problems are considered veterinary emergencies.
your role
What To Do
Assess your horse's eyes as carefully as you can and try to determine whether the eyeball itself appears injured. Injuries to the eye can be sight-threatening. The best course of action is immediate veterinary attention.What Not To Do
Do not attempt to assess or touch your horse's eye if it appears to cause your horse significant discomfort or stress.Skills you may need
Procedures that you may need to perform on your horse.
your vet's role
While you wait for your vet to arrive, keep your horse in a quiet stall. If flies are bothering the eye, consider the use of a fly mask.
- What exactly do you see?
- Are one or both eyes affected?
- Can you see anything else going on with the eye(s)?
- Can you see injury to the eyeball itself?
- Do you notice an injury near the eye?
- Does the eye seem inflamed or abnormal in any other way?
- Is the horse showing signs of eye discomfort like squinting or blinking?
- How severe does the bleeding seem?
- Do you notice bleeding out of other areas, nostrils, mouth, eyes, ears, anus, vulva or penis/sheath?
Diagnostics Your Vet May Perform
Figuring out the cause of the problem. These are tests or procedures used by your vet to determine what’s wrong.
Diagnoses Your Vet May Consider
The cause of the problem. These are conditions or ailments that are the cause of the observations you make.
Treatments Your Vet May Recommend
A way to resolve the condition or diagnosis. Resolving the underlying cause or treating the signs of disease (symptomatic treatment)
further reading & resources
Helpful Terms and Topics
Written, reviewed or shared by experts in equine health