Want this question answered?
freezing
As long as you haven't vomited you will be fine.
6 hours to 3 days for all solid foods
Diarrhea or loose stools in a horse is usually a sign of illness which may be serious or even fatal. Diagnosing and treating the underlying illness quickly is vital. When the illness is treated, the symptom of diarrhea will go away.Other causes of Diarrhea include insufficient roughage, parasites, stress, advanced age, too much green grass or watery feed.If the cause of chronic diarrhea is worms, treating long-term with a daily de-wormer following a broad spectrum product will often eliminate loose stools within days.Diarrhea or loose stools in a horse is often treated as answered below, however there is a new product called Platinum Performance Equine Bio Sponge that is very effective in eliminating the symptom of diarrhea while the cause is being treated. This product is available through veterinarians and under their supervision it can be used in newborns through adults and aged horses.AnswerGenerally, loose stools are from nervousness if they are infrequent.They usually occur when the horse is asked to do something that it has anxiety about such as trailer loading or unloading. If it is not related to anxiety and it is happening more than once a day, isolate the horse from his feed. Replentish his/her water, supplementing with electrolytes, and call your vet. If you are using straw for bedding, be sure they are not eating it as this may be the cause of the irritated intestinal tract. Answer #2That is a great answer and I would like to add a bit more. Loose stools can also be caused by many other factors other than stress or anxiety. The horse could be ingesting some type of poison such as maple leaves in the field. A few maple leaves will give them loose stools but they would have to eat a lot of them for the poison to be fatal. There are several (very common) trees and plants that are mildly poisonous to horses and several that are extremely fatal. I would have someone you trust, a vet or other knowledgeable horse person check your pastures.De-worming can cause loose stools as well.There are many things that can cause loose stools. It's definitely a sign that something is not right in the intestinal tract. If loose stools continue, I would definitely recommend calling your vetcheck your treats you give him cause i found out the hard way that the apples i gave my horse caused his loose stools. not the apples but the number of apples i gave him. it is hit and miss to figure out what is too many but my number is 2 small apples 1-3 times a week. i give them when we first go out riding then when we return that evening after all tack is away and he is groomed and ready for turning out.
No, but they can acquire them not long after they begin eating solid foods (e.g. pured meat) if the food is contaminated.
As long as the pups have teeth they can start on puppy food
No. An amorphous solid is a solid in which there is no long-range order of the positions of the atoms. Solids in which there is long-range atomic order are called crystalline solids or morphous. Salt is a solid with long-range atomic order and hence is morphous in nature.Some examples of amorphous solids are common window glass, many polymers (such as polystyrene) are amorphous, and even foods such as cotton candy.
The treatment back to health is long and first begins with liquids. Gradually, solid foods are introduced and a daily diet providing 5,000 calories or more is instituted.
Long to Be Loose was created on 1993-07-23.
24 to 48 hours. See the Related Links for "Wisdom Teeth" to the bottom for the answer.
As long as it is bright red blood, you can continue fasting. If you have dark bloody stools you should seek medical attention since this is an indicator that there is bleeding somewhere other than the anus.
I think long,loose hair is unsafe in a lab because you could burn your hair.