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Expert
Posts: 1731
     Location: bulldogging capital, oklahoma | Bumping up for input from the evening crowd! Appreciate your inputs! |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 999
        Location: Sunny So Cal | Out in California it starts at around 10k |
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 Career in Looney Tune Land
Posts: 1717
    Location: the high desert | I wont do colic surgery, seems like more times than not you put the horse threw more pain just to have to have them put down in the end. The one time i was faced with having to do colic surgery (i wasnt going to do it anyways) i was quoted $6,000 to $7,000. It might of been even up to $8,000 i cant remember now...
Edited by Iwish 2014-04-29 5:56 PM
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Veteran
Posts: 160
  
| Went thru it last fall...was quoted 8-10k ended up being 14k. One of those things you do the surgery and dig deep into your pocket and at what point do you stop? Plus then you have all of the after care. It was a very tough decision and because we were coming up on our wedding anniversary and the horse was in my wedding. Personally, i dont think we would do it again even though im thankful hes alive. That was my new trailer fund...obviously i didnt and wont be getting a trailer now.
Im sorry you are going thru this its very tough!!
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 I'm Cooler Offline
Posts: 6387
        Location: Pacific Northwest | When ours had surgery at Oregon State University in 2007 it was roughly $7,000 for the surgery, and then he got very very sick not even a week after being home and he had to go back down for another 10 days and it was another $7,000.
ETA a year later the horse ended up being put down from other colic complications, so I honestly don't know if I would do it again. Never say never, but if say tomorrow one of my horses needed colic surgery, I absolutely 100% could not afford it.
Edited by livexlovexrodeo 2014-04-29 7:51 PM
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 I Am Always Right
Posts: 4264
      Location: stray dump capital of the world | I had one with a displaced colon in 2006. It cost us 6,000. She has had no complications since. We lost one in November that we couldn't get stablized enough to do surgery. It was horrible. So sorry your number hit so high. It sure is a tough call.
Edited by sophiebelle 2014-04-30 6:05 AM
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Industrial Srength Barrel Racer
Posts: 7268
     
| halter_ego - 2014-04-28 3:13 PM I really don't think I could or would foot the bill for a colic surgery. I worked for a vet hospital for a couple years and the success rate was pretty low. Those that did survive had a very long, questionable recovery, and out of those we didn't see many going back to the level of work/competetion they were prior to. My good horse is insured and I am still unsure that I would put him through it. Most surgeries I was invovled in cost between 5K and 7K, and it really dodn't make a whole lot of difference in the price if they came out of surgery or died on the table.
I'm with you on this - most if not ALL of the folks that I know who went through this had them end up colicing and dying some years down the road. My cousin's daughter had one colic and I told them I thought the surgery was a huge risk. They paid the money and 6 months down the road - dead horse anyway. Colic just sucks! |
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 Banned by Booger
Posts: 2168
    Location: Huffman, Texas | GUS had surgery at ESMS. No resection, but a 2 ft impaction that they hand manipulated through. Cost of surgery was cheap at $2500.00, however it was all of the aftercare and meds that made the bill go over 10K..the ICU care, the IV meds they get at about a $450 a pop several times a day, icing feet as a precaution for founder, etc. a they quoted me 6-7K, insurance paid 3k and the rest was mine...he came though with no problems. That was at the end of September and I was back riding him in November.
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 Extreme Veteran
Posts: 369
    
| I had this done on my avitar mare on Jan 1, 2004 for a cost of $7000 at Los Colinas, Tx clinic that was still that type of clinic at the time. Impaction type surgery but she stayed for 2 weeks after because she had a setback. Totally recovered quickly once home and has never coliced since (knock on nearest wood). I would do it again in a heartbeat, she is totally worth it.
Only horse people could understand this, but i teared up watching this mare a few years after that, come down the alleyway, out into the arena with my little 6 YO grandaughter and run the prettiest set of barrels all going the slow lope that little bitty girl needed. At that moment i was very glad i had spent that money and had a successful outcome. I was advised by family other than my hubby to just put her down. |
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