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The
Liphook Equine Hospital
SHEATH WASHING
Some horse owners feel
that it is necessary to ‘wash’ a colt or gelding’s
prepuce (sheath) and penis on a fairly regular basis. While
this may seem an innocent attempt to keep their horse ‘clean’,
sheath washing is usually unnecessary and can result in
the establishment of quite severe bacterial infection which
can be very difficult to resolve.
What is normal?
In the relaxed, i.e.
non-erect state, the horse’s penis normally remains
within its protective sheath where it is held in place by
muscles. When these muscles relax and/or the penis fills
with blood and becomes erect, it becomes exposed. At the
tip of the penis (the glans) is the opening of the urethra.
This is surrounded by a deep ‘pocket’, or fossa.
Apart from the glans, which is covered by a thin sensitive
membrane, the rest of the penis (shaft) is covered by smooth,
supple, well-oiled skin, much of which is normally folded
within the prepuce. Debris from the normal secretions of
the skin glands and normally-dying cells from the surface
of the skin within the sheath may accumulate in these folds
and in the urethral fossa and sinus. This accumulation of
waxy material is called ‘smegma’. It may be
black, grey or cream coloured in normal horses and has a
slightly greasy feel. It occasionally forms into bean-shaped
lumps which lodge in the fossa and sinus. Some horses produce
very little smegma whereas others produce large quantities.
In such horses, smegma can often be seen staining the opening
of the sheath and on the inside of the thighs and hocks.
The penis and sheath
have a permanent population of normal bacteria on their
surface, just as all skin surfaces do. These bacteria do
not cause disease, they undoubtedly help maintain the health
of the skin and may help prevent infection by controlling
‘unwelcome’ bacteria. The urethral fossa and
sinus, in particular, can harbour potential venereal disease
producing bacteria (specifically Klebsiella pneumoniae,
Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Taylorella equigenitalis). Infection
with these organisms can cause venereal disease in mares
following mating but rarely cause signs or symptoms of disease
in the carrier stallion, who is usually infected by a carrier
mare. When stallions become infected, these organisms may
survive on the penile skin to become part of the ‘normal’
bacterial population and can then be very difficult to remove.
What harm can sheath
washing do?
Although sheath washing
sounds a good idea and has been recommended by horsemen
universally over the years as an important routine equine
management procedure, it can have a detrimental effect if
the normal ‘ecological’ balance of skin bacteria
is disturbed. Washing the penis and sheath with strong detergent
solutions can remove the natural skin oils, resulting in
dry penile skin which cracks as it folds and unfolds, causing
irritation and damage followed by inflammation and secondary
infection. If this infection is caused by bacteria which
are easy to treat, the problem may resolve spontaneously
once washing with detergent has stopped. Local (creams or
ointments) or systemic (by injection or by mouth) antibiotic
treatment may be necessary.
Repeated washing with
antiseptic, i.e. antibacterial washes or detergent solutions
can result in alteration or removal of the normal penile
skin bacterial population. This may result in colonisation
by unwelcome bacteria which are not normally present, either
from the stable environment or following mating with a venereal
disease carrier mare, and severe penile skin and sheath
infections can result. The infection results in inflammation,
swelling of local tissues and a profuse foul-smelling discharge
which is much more unpleasant than smegma.
These infections can
be extremely difficult to treat due to the resistant nature
of some unwelcome bacteria. In such cases, prolonged treatment
with specific systemic and topical antibiotics may be necessary,
followed by a period of rest and then the application of
a specially-prepared ‘normal’ penile skin bacterial
broth culture to re-colonise the area. In some cases even
this treatment may be unsuccessful and chronic infection
may result in thickened cracked penile skin and extreme
discomfort.
How should sheath washing
be performed?
If your horse appears
to have a healthy penis and sheath there is almost certainly
no need to wash it at all. In horses which produce large
amounts of smegma and appear uncomfortable, and in show
horses or others where this would be considered unsightly,
excess smegma can be wiped or rinsed away with warm clean
water using soap which contains no antiseptics or detergents.
A small amount of light mineral oil (such as baby oil) may
help to loosen lumps and make excessive smegma easier to
remove. It is important to be gentle and not abrade the
skin and to rinse all trace of soap away. For breeding stallions,
rinsing the relaxing penis with warm clean water immediately
on dismount is all that is required.
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