Equine Internal Medicine Q&A 08

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A 10-year-old Standardbred is presented for acute colic, fever (40°C) and fluidy gut sounds on abdominal auscultation. The mare is severely sweating, has tachycardia (90bpm) and tachypnoea, and there appears to be a quick abdominal movement which correlates in number with the heart rate. The mare also has abdominal distension, appears stiff and ataxic, and has trismus of the facial muscles.


Question Answer Article
What is the unusual abdominal movement? [[|Link to Article]]
Which electrolytes would be predictably low in this case? [[ |Link to Article]]


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