Horse Lactation
May 17, 2010
Details about lactation and how to help your mare produce plenty of good-quality milk.
Question:
I’m worried my mare won’t produce enough milk for her foal when it arrives. What can I do to ensure a good, healthy milk supply?
Answer:
Lactation is a very important function in a mare. So important, in fact, those two lives depend on it. The horse owner should always remember that a mare would sacrifice her foal’s health to save her own life … both during gestation and also after foaling. In other words, mares must be fed adequately to maintain their own body condition and have a surplus caloric intake to feed the placenta during gestation and then (after foaling) to make milk to fill the udder. Many nutritionists believe that pregnant mares should be fed the same amount as nonpregnant mares until the last third of gestation, where the nutrient intake may increase to 1.3 times the level of the nonpregnant horse. During the heaviest periods of lactation, nutrient density may be required at 1.5 to 1.7 times the level of the nonpregnant horse. Water requirements may be 50 to 75 percent above the needs of the nonlactating mare. Mares that have had foals before may start producing milk in the last 30 days of gestation. Maiden mares may also secrete milk during the last 30 days of gestation, but many maiden mares will not be stimulated to produce milk until the hours preceding the birth of the foal. Both are considered normal.
Lactation problems to watch out for:
Mastitis, inflammation of the mammary gland, is most often encountered when the foal is weaned. It is important to keep a watchful eye on your mare for one to two weeks after you wean her foal at 4 to 6 months of age. The alveolar cells of the udder will continue to secrete milk and the udder will become distended. As the udder becomes distended, a negative feedback loop will occur and milk production will decrease and udder distension will subside. If the well-meaning horse owner continues to manually express the udder, more milk will be secreted and the udder will not decrease in size. Removing the foal from view and contact, as well as decreasing the mare’s feed intake back to levels equal to that of a nonlactating mare will decrease milk production. Mastitis can easily be diagnosed by your equine veterinarian and may present with pain, fever, hind limb lameness and occasionally anorexia. After diagnosis and treatment, clinical signs rapidly return to normal, often under a week.
Lactation tetany (often called eclampsia in farm animals) rarely occurs in horses. It is caused by mares producing large amounts of milk and then exposed to work requiring muscle contraction since calcium stores are required for muscle activity.
Agalactia is the absence of milk production during a time period when the mare should be producing milk. Almost all instances of agalactia in mares are a result of the ingestion of fescue-type grasses contaminated with the fungus Claviceps sp. This is an ergot alkaloid-producing fungus and contaminates as many as 70 percent of the fescue grasses in the United States. In addition to agalactia, ergot alkaloids are responsible for thickened fetal membranes, prolonged gestation, abortion and premature rupture of the chorioallantois (red-bag delivery). Ergot alkaloids reduce prolactin secretion since they are dopamineagonists. To treat agalactia caused by ergot alkaloids, you can use dopamine antagonists such as domperidone, reserpine, sulpiride and phenothiazine tranquilizers such as acepromazine. Mares can be grazed on fescue when they are pregnant but should be removed from fescue-contaminated pastures during the last 90 days of gestation and supplemented with alfalfa that has very high levels of calcium available to the horse.
Galactorrhea is the term for inappropriate lactation. Impending abortion may stimulate lactation or sometimes the premature foaling of a twin pregnancy. Premature lactation is a very common cause of the loss of colostrum and the subsequent failure of passive transfer in the newborn foal. Foals that are born to mares with dripping milk should be quickly evaluated as to their IGG transfer so supplemental colostrum or equine plasma can be administered. When the newborn foal is 6 to 8 hours old, almost 85 percent of the passive transfer has been completed and this is an ideal time to evaluate IGG transfer. If there has been a partial failure, colostrum still has time to be absorbed before having to resort to plasma administration. Many veterinarians and horse owners in the past have waited until 24 hours of age to check IGG status of the foal, but by this time, colostrum can no longer be absorbed in any appreciable amounts and plasma transfusion is the horse owner’s only and costly option.
Inappropriate lactation is a subset of galactorrhea. In female neonates or in weanlings, the filling of the udder is called witch’s milk. This is attributed to lactogenic chemicals that are accessed through the mare’s udder or blood circulation and usually comes from the mare ingesting the estrogenic components of many spring grasses. Swelling of mammary tissue and milk secretion has even been reported in human infants. In humans, bromocriptine (a synthetic ergot alkaloid) is used to suppress inappropriate lactation, as it is a dopamine agonist. Bromocriptine is not labeled for use in horses, dosages are not well defined and its use may be controversial. In fact, no treatment of any kind is recommended for the presence of witch’s milk.
Dr. Ben Espy, member of the American Association of Equine Practitioners
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8 Comments on “Horse Lactation”
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May 19th, 2010 at 1:46 pm
I recently bought a mare and foal about a month old, the mare was wormed by the seller just prior to our leaving with Ivermection paste wormer, over the next few days many live worms were seen in the feces of the mare, I wormed her again with panacure, how long should I wait before I worm her again, and should I worm the colt, who is soon to be 2 months old? What should I use on her/and or the colt?
May 20th, 2010 at 1:33 pm
Karen, we forwarded your question to AQHA Corporate Partner Farnam. Here is an answer from their experts:
Anthelmintics of the benzimidazole class, like Panacur, are gone from the animal’s system within a very few days, no more than three. Ivermectin stays in the system for more than three weeks, so no dewormer should be given to the mare at this time.
The foal should be dewormed, preferably with a pyrantel pamoate paste or liquid to treat for ascarids.
Seeing live worms in the feces of the mare after Ivermectin is unusual. Either the mare had an extremely heavy worm load or dietary change caused her to shed large numbers of strongyles. This will happen after treatment with benzimidazoles or pyrantel, as the worms are moved more quickly with those drugs than with Ivermectin.
I hope this answers your question.
Dr. Tom Kennedy, senior vice president, R&D, Farnam Companies
May 21st, 2010 at 10:06 pm
how do i chek mi horse records what page do i go
December 11th, 2010 at 9:05 pm
i have a 11 yr old mare whos now bread for the forth time 1st she had a live single the second time she had a set of twins ultra sound didnt show full term but lost them both foaled on her own while we were at my sons graduation both nice size we think suffication any way this time she was ultra sounded but shes as big as she was with twins the closest place for a ultra sound is around two hrs away and she about 8 mo bread so i realy dont want to haul her with all this bad weather we have in wisconsin we can handle most situations we have pulled tubed you name it we have done it but my question it can a mare produce enough colostrum for twins she has allways produced plenty of milk and has never leaked prior to foaling she will be watched 24/7 the more i read the more confused i get and most vets around here havent dealt that much with this subject she is vac. reg and wormed has a grass alph alpha mix hay anh a mare foal grain raition and we have auto waters so theres allways fresh water thanks for any help you can offer
February 25th, 2011 at 8:40 am
[...] she immediately started feeding him milk replacer out of a [...]
September 10th, 2011 at 8:43 pm
My mare is due the 13th,and this is my first foal right now she is walking wierd in her stall, lactating to the pointt where her teets are dripping, but is this an actuall sign, or a false alarm? Common sense tells me that the babys coming, but shes been doing the same thing for 4 hours, and she has been alone (without me in the barn) for 2 but still the same thing. I dont know wat to do? ANY ADVICE?
September 12th, 2011 at 12:50 pm
I have a 14 yr old mare. She is pregnant for the third time. First pregnancy resulted in twins, both passed right after birth. Second was a great wonderful big filly. now she is supposedly five months pregnant I have not ultrasounded. but I was grooming her today and felt her teets, well i squeezed one just to see what was going on and it squirted out a milky liquid. and alot of it. is this okay do I need to call the vet?
May 12th, 2012 at 6:55 am
Just wondering if anyone can help me, my mare has foales a beautiful stud colt, he is 4 days old and I don’t think she is producing enough milk for him, I had a vet. here and she gave the mare a shot of Oxytocin, my question is can she keep getting these shots? I did not really see any difference, we one gave the mare 1 shot, also is there anything out on the market that she can eat to help her produce more milk? She is on pasture and hay, eating 3 scoops of Omelene 300, lots of water… Thanks Cheryl