Mule Symptoms

Browse 72 guides from veterinary sources about mule symptoms.

72 guides

Blood in a Mule’s Stool: Possible Causes & When to Call the Vet

Blood in a mule’s stool can signal colitis, parasites, rectal injury, or severe gut disease. Learn urgent signs, vet...

Read more →

Blood in Mule Urine: Causes, Urgency & What to Watch For

Blood in a mule’s urine can signal stones, infection, trauma, or kidney disease. Learn urgent warning signs, vet tests,...

Read more →

Can Mules Vomit? Gagging, Regurgitation and Emergency Signs

Mules do not truly vomit. Learn what gagging, feed from the nose, choke, and reflux can mean, plus emergency signs and...

Read more →

Cloudy Eye in Mules: What Corneal Haze or Blue Eye Can Mean

Cloudy eye in mules can signal a corneal ulcer, uveitis, trauma, or infection. Learn urgent warning signs, vet care...

Read more →

Excessive Thirst in Mules: Causes of Drinking More Than Usual

Excessive thirst in mules can signal heat stress, kidney disease, PPID, or toxins. Learn when to monitor, when to call...

Read more →

Fast Breathing in Mules: Pain, Heat, Illness or Emergency?

Fast breathing in mules can signal heat stress, pain, colic, or lung disease. Learn when to monitor, when to cool, and...

Read more →

Mule Abortion Signs or Pregnancy Loss: Warning Signs Owners May See

See your vet immediately if a pregnant mule has discharge, early udder development, bleeding, fever, or tissue passage....

Read more →

Mule Ataxia: Wobbliness, Incoordination & Serious Causes

Mule ataxia can signal spinal injury, EPM, EHV-1, or toxic disease. Learn urgent warning signs, vet testing, treatment...

Read more →

Mule Bad Breath: Dental Disease, Infection or GI Problem?

Mule bad breath often points to dental disease, tooth root infection, choke, or sinus trouble. Learn when to monitor,...

Read more →

Mule Bloating or Belly Distension: Gas, Colic or Emergency?

Mule belly distension can mean gas, impaction, or life-threatening colic. Learn red flags, vet care options, home...

Read more →

Mule Choke Signs: Drooling, Coughing and Feed Coming From the Nose

Mule choke can cause drooling, coughing, and feed from the nose. Learn urgent signs, what your vet may do, home care,...

Read more →

Mule Colic Signs: Subtle Symptoms, Emergencies & What to Do

Mule colic can look quiet at first. Learn subtle warning signs, true emergencies, what your vet may do, home steps, and...

Read more →

Mule Constipation: Causes, Impaction Risk & What Owners Should Do

Mule constipation can signal painful impaction colic. Learn common causes, red-flag symptoms, vet treatment options,...

Read more →

Mule Coughing: Causes, Red Flags & Treatment Questions

Mule coughing can stem from dust, infection, choke, or lung disease. Learn red flags, when to call your vet, likely...

Read more →

Mule Depression or Dullness: Causes, Signs & When to Call a Vet

Mule acting dull or depressed? Learn common causes, urgent warning signs, vet care options, home support, and realistic...

Read more →

Mule Diarrhea: Causes, Dehydration Risk & When It’s an Emergency

Mule diarrhea can turn serious fast. Learn common causes, dehydration warning signs, emergency red flags, vet care...

Read more →

Mule Drooling: Dental Pain, Choke, Toxins or Mouth Injury?

Mule drooling can signal choke, dental pain, mouth injury, or toxin exposure. Learn urgent warning signs, vet care...

Read more →

Mule Dropping Feed While Eating: Dental Problems, Pain & Next Steps

Mules that drop feed while eating may have dental pain, mouth sores, or infection. Learn common causes, when to call...

Read more →

Mule Ear Discharge: Infection, Mites or Injury?

Mule ear discharge can signal mites, infection, trauma, or a foreign body. Learn red flags, vet care options, home...

Read more →

Mule Ear Pain: Why Touching the Ears Causes a Strong Reaction

Mule ear pain can signal ticks, infection, trauma, or deeper ear disease. Learn when to monitor, when to call your vet,...

Read more →

Mule Eye Discharge: Causes of Weepy or Goopy Eyes

Mule eye discharge can signal irritation, infection, ulcers, or uveitis. Learn when to monitor, when to call your vet,...

Read more →

Mule Fever: Causes, Temperature Concerns & When to Call the Vet

Mule fever can signal infection, heat stress, or inflammation. Learn normal temperature ranges, urgent warning signs,...

Read more →

Mule Gas: Is Excessive Gut Gas a Sign of Trouble?

Mule gas can be mild or an early colic sign. Learn common causes, red flags, vet care, home monitoring, and realistic...

Read more →

Mule Hair Loss: Causes of Bald Patches, Rubbing & Coat Problems

Mule hair loss can come from parasites, ringworm, rain rot, tack rubs, or skin disease. Learn when to monitor, when to...

Read more →

Mule Head Shaking: Flies, Ear Problems, Pain or Neurologic Disease?

Mule head shaking can be caused by flies, ear disease, dental pain, eye irritation, or trigeminal nerve pain. Learn...

Read more →

Mule Head Tilt: Ear Disease, Neurologic Problems & Next Steps

Mule head tilt can signal inner ear disease, trauma, or a neurologic problem. Learn urgent warning signs, vet workup,...

Read more →

Mule Hives: Allergic Reactions, Triggers & Emergency Warning Signs

Mule hives are raised allergic welts often triggered by insects, drugs, or plants. Learn emergency warning signs, vet...

Read more →

Mule Hoof Pain: Abscess, Laminitis or Something Else?

Mule hoof pain can signal an abscess, laminitis, bruise, or deeper injury. Learn red flags, vet care options, home...

Read more →

Mule Hot Spots and Raw Skin: Causes, Relief & Infection Risks

Mule hot spots and raw skin can stem from insects, moisture, tack rubs, or infection. Learn when to monitor, when to...

Read more →

Mule Infertility or Reproductive Problems: What Owners Search For

Most mules are naturally sterile, but heat cycles, discharge, pregnancy concerns, and breeding exams still matter....

Read more →

Mule Isolating From the Herd: Illness Signs & What It Means

A mule standing apart from the herd can signal pain, colic, fever, lameness, or stress. Learn when to monitor, when to...

Read more →

Mule Itching: Causes of Scratching, Rubbing and Skin Irritation

Mule itching can come from insects, lice, mites, infection, or allergies. Learn when to monitor, when to see your vet,...

Read more →

Mule Labored Breathing: Emergency Causes & What to Do Right Away

Mule breathing hard? Learn emergency causes of labored breathing, red-flag signs, what to do right away, and what your...

Read more →

Mule Lethargy: Causes, When to Worry & What to Do

Mule lethargy can signal colic, dehydration, infection, pain, or metabolic disease. Learn red flags, vet care options,...

Read more →

Mule Limping: Common Causes, Hoof Pain & When to Seek Help

Mule limping can signal hoof abscesses, laminitis, injury, or joint pain. Learn urgent warning signs, vet care options,...

Read more →

Mule Looking at the Flank: Early Colic Sign Owners Notice

Mule looking at its flank can be an early colic sign. Learn common causes, when to call your vet, home care steps, and...

Read more →

Mule Loss of Appetite: Causes, Emergencies & Home Care

Mule not eating? Learn common causes, red-flag emergencies, what your vet may check, home care steps, and realistic...

Read more →

Mule Lumps and Bumps: Common Causes, Cancer Concerns & Next Steps

Mule skin lumps can be bites, abscesses, proud flesh, or tumors like sarcoids. Learn when to monitor, when to call your...

Read more →

Mule Lying Down More Than Usual: Fatigue, Pain or Serious Illness?

Mules that lie down more than usual may have pain, colic, laminitis, weakness, or serious illness. Learn red flags, vet...

Read more →

Mule Muscle Loss: Why Topline Loss and Wasting Happen

Mule topline loss can signal poor nutrition, dental disease, parasites, pain, or endocrine problems. Learn when to...

Read more →

Mule Nasal Discharge: Clear vs. Colored Snot and When to Worry

Learn what clear, white, yellow, green, bloody, or foul-smelling nasal discharge in mules can mean, when to monitor,...

Read more →

Mule Not Drinking Water: Causes, Dehydration Risks & What to Do

Mule not drinking water? Learn common causes, dehydration warning signs, when to see your vet, home care steps, and...

Read more →

Mule Not Passing Manure: Colic Warning Signs & Emergency Steps

Mule not passing manure? Learn colic warning signs, when to call your vet urgently, what to do at home, and realistic...

Read more →

Mule Paralysis or Inability to Use a Limb: Emergency Warning Signs

Mule paralysis or sudden limb weakness can signal fracture, laminitis, nerve injury, or neurologic disease. Learn...

Read more →

Mule Pawing the Ground: Colic, Stress or Pain?

Mule pawing can signal colic, pain, stress, or hoof trouble. Learn urgent warning signs, what your vet may do, home...

Read more →

Mule Pica: Why Your Mule Is Eating Dirt, Wood or Non-Food Items

Mule eating dirt, wood, or other non-food items? Learn common causes, urgent warning signs, vet tests, home care, and...

Read more →

Mule Rash: Skin Irritation, Allergies or Infection?

Mule rash can come from insects, moisture, allergies, mites, or infection. Learn when to monitor at home, when to see...

Read more →

Mule Red Eye: Causes, Pain Signs & When It’s an Emergency

Mule red eye can signal trauma, corneal ulcer, conjunctivitis, or uveitis. Learn pain signs, emergency red flags, vet...

Read more →

Mule Reluctant to Move: Pain Signs Owners Shouldn’t Ignore

A mule that will not move may be showing severe pain from laminitis, hoof abscess, colic, injury, or muscle disease....

Read more →

Mule Restlessness: Is It Stress, Pain or Early Colic?

Mule restlessness can signal stress, pain, or early colic. Learn red flags, when to call your vet, likely tests, home...

Read more →

Mule Rolling Repeatedly: Normal Dust Bathing or Colic Emergency?

Mule rolling can be normal dust bathing or a colic emergency. Learn red flags, when to call your vet, likely causes,...

Read more →

Mule Seizures: Emergency Causes and Immediate Safety Steps

Mule seizures are an emergency. Learn urgent causes, safe first-aid steps, when to call your vet, and what testing and...

Read more →

Mule Sneezing: When It’s Benign and When It Signals Disease

Mule sneezing is often dust-related, but fever, nasal discharge, swelling, or breathing trouble can signal infection...

Read more →

Mule Squinting: Eye Pain, Ulcers and Other Serious Causes

Mule squinting can signal eye pain, corneal ulcer, uveitis, or trauma. Learn urgent warning signs, vet care options,...

Read more →

Mule Stiffness: Arthritis, Hoof Pain or Muscle Soreness?

Mule stiffness can come from arthritis, hoof pain, laminitis, or sore muscles. Learn red flags, home care, vet tests,...

Read more →

Mule Stumbling or Tripping: Hoof Pain, Weakness or Neurologic Disease?

Mule stumbling can come from hoof pain, poor trim balance, weakness, or neurologic disease. Learn urgent signs, vet...

Read more →

Mule Swelling: Legs, Face or Body Swelling and What It May Mean

Mule swelling in the legs, face, or body can signal allergy, infection, injury, or edema. Learn when to monitor at home...

Read more →

Mule Teeth Grinding: Pain Sign, Stress or GI Disease?

Mule teeth grinding can signal mouth pain, colic, ulcers, or stress. Learn when to monitor, when to see your vet, and...

Read more →

Mule Testicular or Scrotal Swelling: Causes and When It’s Urgent

Mule testicular or scrotal swelling can signal trauma, infection, hernia, or post-castration problems. Learn urgent...

Read more →

Mule Tremors or Shaking: Causes, Emergencies & What to Watch For

Mule shaking can signal pain, colic, toxins, muscle disease, or neurologic trouble. Learn emergency signs, vet steps,...

Read more →

Mule Udder Swelling: Heat Cycle, Mastitis or Something Else?

Mule udder swelling can stem from normal hormonal changes, pregnancy, edema, or mastitis. Learn red flags, vet care...

Read more →

Mule Urinary Incontinence: Why Urine Leakage Happens

Mule urinary incontinence can signal bladder infection, stones, nerve injury, or overflow. Learn causes, urgency signs,...

Read more →

Mule Urinating More Than Usual: Excessive Urination Explained

Mules that urinate more than usual may have kidney, hormone, diet, or medication issues. Learn causes, red flags, vet...

Read more →

Mule Vaginal Discharge: Normal Cycle, Infection or Pregnancy Problem?

Mule vaginal discharge can be normal heat mucus or a sign of uterine infection, placentitis, or foaling trouble. Learn...

Read more →

Mule Vocalization Changes: Why Braying, Silence or Distress Sounds Matter

Mule braying changes, sudden silence, or distress sounds can signal pain, airway trouble, stress, or colic. Learn when...

Read more →

Mule Weight Gain or Obesity: Health Risks, Causes & Safe Management

Learn causes, health risks, vet care, and safe weight-loss options for overweight mules, including laminitis and...

Read more →

Mule Weight Loss: Common Causes, Red Flags & What to Check First

Mule losing weight? Learn common causes, urgent red flags, what to check first, vet tests to expect, and practical home...

Read more →

Mule Wounds Not Healing: Infection, Proud Flesh & Other Causes

Mule wound not healing? Learn signs of infection, proud flesh, when to see your vet, home care steps, and realistic...

Read more →

Noisy Breathing in Mules: Wheezing, Roaring and Upper Airway Concerns

Noisy breathing in mules can signal airway swelling, asthma, infection, or roaring. Learn urgent signs, vet tests, home...

Read more →

Painful Urination in Mules: Straining, Discomfort & Possible Causes

Painful urination in mules can signal stones, cystitis, blockage, or trauma. Learn urgent signs, vet care options, home...

Read more →

Pregnancy Signs in Mules: What Owners Notice and What’s Normal

Pregnancy signs in mules can mimic normal body changes or serious problems. Learn what’s expected, when to call your...

Read more →

Sudden Aggression in Mules: Pain, Hormones or Behavior Problem?

Sudden aggression in mules can signal pain, hormones, fear, or learned behavior. Learn red flags, vet workups, home...

Read more →

Worried about a symptom?

Connect with a veterinarian to get your pet the care they need.

Find a Vet