Equine - Cushings Disease
Nina Arbella
Equine Cushings disease is caused by a tumor
in the pituitary gland, which is responsible for the production
and regulation of hormones. Symptoms include a long, shaggy
coat that does not shed, excessive drinking and urination,
laminitis, a tendency for recurring infections in the hoof
(foot abscesses), and a loss of muscle mass, especially
along the topline and rump. At Eye of the Storm Equine Rescue,
we’ve discovered what appears to be a cure for Cushings
disease in horses. We’re not licensed nor are we doctors,
but we know what has worked for our horses and for lots
of others, so we wanted to share our experiences in case
it helps cure your own horse of equine Cushings disease.
While looking through a nutritional healing
book at Debra’s Natural Gourmet in West Concord, Mass.,
I came across a sentence that said “Chasteberry feeds the
pituitary gland.” Chasteberry in recent times has been used
mainly for “women’s complaints.” I know it works because
it beats the crap out of PMS, you feel better in 20 minutes.
“Hmm,” I say, “I like chasteberry, let’s see what it can
do for our two Cushings horses.”
Bess, our 26 year old Shetland had obvious
symptoms: long hair that didn’t shed and she was a sway
back. Not as bad as some, but still obvious. I couldn’t
wait for the vet to take some blood to find out her “numbers.”
The results were positive for Cushings. I put her on one
teaspoon twice a day, three weeks on and one week off. Though
she began to shed her coat of “buffalo” hair almost immediately,
she never was a very slick pony. But I was determined to
keep her on the chasteberry one year before testing her
blood again. If I saw results then, I would tell the world.
One year later, after Bess’ test results
came back, the vet said, “I don’t know what you’re doing,
but keep on doing it.” Bess’ numbers were down 33 points!
I don’t know exactly what these numbers represent, but evidently
this never happens in real life! After one year of feeding
her pituitary gland, had I managed to reverse her Cushings
disease?
I was very excited as this ailment affects
the lives of millions of old (and not so old) horses in
so many negative ways. This disease is more common now than
it has ever been in the past. No one really knows why, though
I have my theories. That is another tale for another day.
I was getting whole chasteberry in one pound bulk bags from
Natural Gourmet and running it through a coffee grinder.
The seeds are very hard and I figured it would come out
the other end the same way they went in, unless we knocked
the shells off them. You run the grinder until most of the
pinging of hard berries can’t be heard anymore. You cannot
grind them up completely, but that’s okay. Horses are made
to digest roughage. They handle the chunks just fine. You
should have a grinder for this purpose only, as your coffee
might taste funny if you use the grinder for both.
Right around the time I was ready to tell
the world about this “cure,” another product came on the
market called Hormonize. It is a liquid and costs around
$45 per liter and lasts two weeks for your average size
horse. That’s $90 per month to treat the horse. The developers
of this product found it to be effective not only on mares
in heat, but it also did some impressive things for Cushings
horses, too. It is sold for this purpose as well. It is
an all natural herbal remedy. A bit pricey, though.
I checked out the ingredients. It is a tincture
of chasteberry! I think they call it vitex or monks pepper
on the back. I’m not sure. It greatly saddens me that the
treatment for such a devastating disease sells for so much.
Horses don’t need herbal tinctures. They can and do digest
some pretty coarse stuff (have you ever tried to eat dry
timothy hay?). They can not only digest the herb, but utilize
it in that form beautifully.
Bess, unfortunately, died at age 28 when she
decided her mission was accomplished, so we never got a
third blood test from her. We have two other Cushings horses,
and all of our older mares are on chasteberry as well. Junebug,
who is 8 years old, was tested last year and we’ll test
her again soon to see where her numbers are. Snowdrop was
never tested, but all her symptoms have disappeared and
she is doing well at 24 years old.
If any of you out there would like to try
chasteberry, here’s what to do. Go to your local health
food store and special order one pound bulk bag whole chastetree
berry from the Frontier herb company (please mention Eye
of the Storm Equine Rescue when you do). You might want
to order more than one bag so that when you’re down to one
you can reorder. One bag will cost you less than $20 and
will last a couple of months per horse.
Run the berries through your coffee grinder
and feed one teaspoon twice a day with feed. We give the
same amount to horses and ponies. It works on both mares
and geldings. Give it to them three weeks on and one week
off all year round. It will even keep the mares from being
quite so crabby in the spring.
We also give them all vitamin E in the evening,
vitamin C in the morning, and MSM. No sugars or carbohydrates
(not even a carrot). There are feeds out there that are
low in both, such as Blue Seal Racer and some of the senior
feeds (do some research). All in all, chasteberry is the
answer. Even our two 30-year old mares don’t have Cushings,
only Bess, Junebug, and Snowdrop, who came to us with the
disease and it appears to be reversed. I never had horses
of my own get Cushings. I have every horse in town that
has Cushings on chasteberry and they’re all doing great!
This is a cheap, easy, healthy remedy for Cushings disease.
About the author:
Nina Arbella is founder and president of Eye of the Storm
Equine Rescue of Stow, Massachuetts. Contact Nina and visit
the rescue center’s website at http://www.equine-rescue.com.