
Horses with white hair and pink skin underneath, such as on a blaze or snip, are in danger of sunburn.
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Sunlight has beneficial effects for horses, including the manufacture of vitamin D by the
skin, relief of muscle and tendon stiffness or soreness and possibly even
improved immunity.
But horses with pink-skinned areas may suffer sunburn if
overexposed and could be at higher risk for equine skin cancer over the
years.
Zinc-oxide cream, the white goop lifeguards use on horse's noses, is one
of the most effective sunscreens available. It’s safe for horses and helps heal
any skin irritation or blistering. You can generally also use any sunscreen
product on the market for people, such as those containing PABA, on your horse.
However, some horses can have allergic/sensitivity reactions to these products
or to fragrances in them.
Since the reactions themselves are also red and
angry-looking, like a sunburn, if you respond to the reactions by putting even
more sunscreen on the horse, you can end up with a severe reaction with open,
oozing skin. Some sunscreen-sensitivity reactions, though, occur only after the
horse has been exposed to the sun and are the result of a reaction between the
sunscreen agent and the sun.
To test the horse for sensitivity, apply the
product at night to a sensitive area like the back of one pastern, and check it
in the morning. If there’s no redness or swelling, use the product during the
day on only one pink-skinned area. If the spot with the sunscreen applied
actually looks redder at the end of the day than the areas that didn’t have it,
your horse is sensitive to that sunscreen. Don’t use it on him.
A
particularly severe type of sun reaction is photosensitivity, where the skin
becomes red, swollen, and cracks open. Crusts will develop, and loss of the skin
can occur. These reactions can easily develop infections and are extremely
painful. The reactions only occur in pink-skinned areas. When horses have the
pink skin/white hair on their legs, photosensitivity reactions may be confused
with scratches/”dew poisoning” or chigger infestations. Several drugs and plants
can also cause photosensitivity.
Possible Photosensitizing AgentsThe
following ingredients or products can cause a photosensitivity reaction in your
horse:
• Tetracycline antibiotics
• Sulfa antibiotics
• Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, especially ketoprofen
•
Chlorpromazine tranquilizers
• St. John's Wort
• Klamath
weed
• Rape pasture
• Goat weed
• Spring parsley
• Alsike clover
• Buckwheat