Emergency Horse Care
In this article
Emergency Horse Care: What To Do Before the Vet Arrives
By Dr Duncan Houston
If your horse is injured or suddenly unwell, the first few minutes matter more than most people realise.
Horse emergencies escalate quickly. A simple puncture can become a joint infection. A small cut can involve a tendon. A delay of even a few hours can completely change the outcome.
The goal is not to “fix” the problem yourself.
The goal is to stabilise your horse, prevent further damage, and buy time until veterinary care arrives.
This is exactly how to do that.
Quick Answer
In any horse emergency, call your vet immediately, keep your horse calm and contained, control bleeding, protect the injury from contamination, and avoid making the situation worse. Hoof punctures, deep wounds, breathing issues, or neurological signs should always be treated as urgent. Early, correct first aid significantly improves outcomes.
What Matters Most in the First 10 Minutes
In practice, outcomes are determined less by the injury itself and more by what happens immediately after it occurs.
Focus on these priorities:
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Call your vet first
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Keep the horse calm and still
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Control bleeding or contamination
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Do not worsen the injury
Decision checkpoint
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If your horse is standing, alert, and weight-bearing, you have time to stabilise properly
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If your horse is down, panicking, or unable to stand, this is immediately critical
Hoof Puncture Wounds: One of the Highest-Risk Emergencies
What’s happening in the body
A nail or sharp object can penetrate beyond the hoof wall into:
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Sensitive laminae
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Tendon sheath
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Navicular bursa
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Coffin joint
These structures have poor immune access, which means infection can develop rapidly and become catastrophic.
What it looks like
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Sudden lameness
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Reluctance to bear weight
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Nail or object visible in hoof
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Heat in the hoof over time
What to do immediately
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Do not rush to remove the object if it is deep or the horse is unstable
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If safe, remove carefully and note the angle and depth
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Mark the entry site clearly (chalk, photo, diagram)
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Flush with clean water or saline
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Apply a clean, padded dressing or hoof boot
Why this matters
The most common mistake is underestimating these injuries.
Even a small puncture can lead to:
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Septic arthritis
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Tendon sheath infection
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Long-term lameness
Time-based guidance
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Vet assessment should occur as soon as possible, ideally within hours
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Delays beyond 12–24 hours significantly increase complication risk
Lower Leg Cuts: When “Small” Is Not Actually Small
What’s happening in the body
The lower limb has minimal soft tissue coverage, meaning:
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Tendons
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Ligaments
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Joints
are often just beneath the skin
What it looks like
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Clean or jagged wound
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Bleeding (mild to severe)
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Swelling developing over hours
What to do immediately
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Rinse thoroughly with saline or clean water
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Apply a non-stick sterile pad
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Bandage with:
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padding layer
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firm outer wrap
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Keep the horse still
Decision checkpoint
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If the wound is near a joint or tendon, treat as serious
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If it is deep, gaping, or bleeding heavily, this is urgent
Common clinical reality
Many wounds that look minor externally end up involving deeper structures.
This is where early veterinary involvement changes everything.
Heavy Bleeding: What Actually Saves the Horse
What’s happening
Blood loss reduces oxygen delivery to tissues and can lead to shock.
What to do
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Apply direct pressure immediately
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Use thick padding
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Layer bandages to maintain pressure
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Elevate limb if possible
Critical rule
Do not keep removing bandages to “check”
You will disrupt clotting
Choke in Horses: Not What Most People Expect
What’s happening
Choke in horses is an esophageal obstruction, not airway blockage.
Food gets stuck in the esophagus, leading to:
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Backflow through nostrils
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Drooling
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Coughing
What to do
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Remove all food
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Allow access to water
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Keep the horse calm
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Call your vet
What not to do
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Do not force feed
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Do not attempt aggressive flushing
Respiratory Distress: Always Treat as an Emergency
What it looks like
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Flaring nostrils
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Loud or laboured breathing
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Open-mouth breathing
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Neck extended forward
What’s happening
The horse is struggling to move air effectively.
This can rapidly become life-threatening.
Immediate action
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Move to a quiet, well-ventilated area
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Minimise stress
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Call your vet immediately
Head Trauma and Eye Injuries
Why these matter more than they look
Head injuries and eye problems can deteriorate quickly and lead to:
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Blindness
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Neurological issues
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Permanent damage
Red flags
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Unequal pupils
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Bleeding from nose or eyes
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Sudden blindness
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Disorientation
Action
Always treat these as urgent veterinary cases
Severity Framework: How Urgent Is This?
Low risk
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Small superficial cuts
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Mild lameness
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No swelling or systemic signs
Monitor closely and seek advice if not improving within 24–48 hours
Moderate risk
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Deeper wounds
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Persistent lameness
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Swelling or heat
Vet assessment recommended within 12–24 hours
High risk
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Hoof punctures
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Deep lacerations
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Heavy bleeding
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Choke
Immediate veterinary involvement required
Critical
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Unable to stand
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Severe respiratory distress
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Neurological signs
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Uncontrolled bleeding
Emergency response required immediately
What To Do Right Now: Simple Action Plan
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Call your vet
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Keep the horse calm and confined
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Control bleeding or protect the injury
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Avoid unnecessary movement
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Monitor:
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breathing
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behaviour
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pain level
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Prepare for transport if advised
Common Mistakes That Make Things Worse
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Waiting too long to call a vet
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Removing deeply embedded objects incorrectly
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Underestimating hoof punctures
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Poor bandaging technique
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Allowing the horse to move excessively
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Using unapproved medications
Prevention: The Things That Actually Reduce Emergencies
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Regular paddock inspections for sharp objects
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Maintain fencing and stable safety
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Good lighting in working areas
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Routine hoof care
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Staff training on early signs
Frequently Asked Questions
Can a hoof puncture heal on its own?
Sometimes superficially, but deeper infections are common. Always treat as high risk.
Should I always bandage a wound?
Most lower limb wounds benefit from bandaging, but correct technique is critical.
How long can I wait before calling a vet?
If you are unsure, call immediately. Waiting is one of the most common causes of complications.
Is choke life-threatening?
Usually not immediately, but it requires veterinary treatment to prevent complications.
When is lameness an emergency?
If the horse cannot bear weight, worsens rapidly, or has a puncture or swelling, treat as urgent.
Final Thoughts
In horse emergencies, the difference between a full recovery and a long-term problem often comes down to early decisions, not just the injury itself.
Stay calm. Act quickly. Focus on stabilisation, not perfection.
That approach saves horses.
If you are ever unsure whether something is urgent, ASK A VET™ can help guide you in real time and support you in making the right decision for your horse.