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Topic:Allergies

Allergies in horses are immune-mediated responses to environmental antigens, such as pollen, dust, mold, food, or insect bites, that result in hypersensitivity reactions. These reactions can manifest as respiratory issues, skin conditions, or gastrointestinal disturbances, impacting the horse's overall health and performance. Common allergic conditions in horses include recurrent airway obstruction (RAO), urticaria, and insect bite hypersensitivity. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of equine allergies is crucial for developing effective management and treatment strategies. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management of allergies in horses, as well as their impact on equine welfare and performance.
Dermal reactivity to histamine, serotonin and bradykinin in relation to allergic skin reactions of the horse.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    March 1, 1986   Volume 9, Issue 1 40-48 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1986.tb00010.x
Morrow A, Quinn PJ, Baker KP.The reactivity of horse skin to intradermal inoculation of histamine, serotonin and bradykinin was investigated, and the resulting reactions compared with those produced in the same horses by a 1% whole-body extract of Culicoides. Both histamine and bradykinin produced large reactions, but there was no significant correlation between the dermal responsiveness to insect allergen and either histamine or bradykinin. Two anti-histamine drugs (promethazine hydrochloride and tripelennamine hydrochloride) were effective in reducing the reaction produced by the insect extract.
The occurrence of and exposure to animal allergens.
Allergy    January 1, 1985   Volume 40 Suppl 3 37-39 
Schwartz B.No abstract available
Sources of allergens in animals.
Allergy    January 1, 1985   Volume 40 Suppl 3 51-53 doi: 10.1111/j.1398-9995.1985.tb04300.x
Vanto T.No abstract available
Effects of tryptamine antagonists on the anaphylactic contractions of the bovine pulmonary smooth muscles.
Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics    June 1, 1984   Volume 7, Issue 2 153-158 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2885.1984.tb00892.x
Ogunbiyi PO, Eyre P.Calves were sensitized with horse plasma (H.P.), 0.2 ml/kg, i.v., and H.P. (0.2 ml/kg) in Freund's complete adjuvant, s.c. The latter injection was repeated 1 week later and the animals were killed 10 days after the second injection. Spirally cut strips of pulmonary artery and vein and the trachealis muscle from the sensitized calves contracted to 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) and specific antigen (horse plasma). Antigen-induced contractions of the pulmonary smooth muscles were significantly blocked (P less than 0.05) by the 5-HT antagonists, methysergide and ketanserin. The trachea, however, app...
Allergic skin diseases in the horse.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Large animal practice    March 1, 1984   Volume 6, Issue 1 87-90 doi: 10.1016/s0196-9846(17)30041-1
Byars DT.No abstract available
[Nutrition and skin diseases in the horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1984   Volume 12, Issue 4 493-498 
Meyer H.Skin diseases of the horse can be produced or enhanced through nutrient deficiency, intestinal formation of detrimental substances, photosensitizing compounds and by intake of allergenes. An exact case history regarding feeding is useful for evaluation of every skin abnormality.
Culicoides hypersensitivity in the horse: 15 cases in southwestern british columbia.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1984   Volume 25, Issue 1 26-32 
Kleider N, Lees MJ.The investigation of a chronic, seasonal dermatitis of horses in southwestern British Columbia is described. Typically the history indicated an insidious onset, followed by a gradual progression in the severity of the signs each year. Lesions appeared during the warmer months of the year and tended to regress during the winter. The clinical signs consisted of areas of pruritus and excoriation, affecting predominantly the ventral midline, mane and tailhead. In all cases corticosteroid therapy relieved the pruritus and allowed the lesions to heal.The salient pathological findings were hyperkerat...
Sweet itch: responses of clinically normal and affected horses to intradermal challenge with extracts of biting insects.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 3 266-272 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01788.x
Quinn PJ, Baker KP, Morrow AN.In a study of the skin reactivity of horses with lesions of sweet itch, six clinically normal horses and seven affected horses were challenged intradermally with extracts of Culicoides, Stomoxys, Tabanidae and Culex species. All the affected horses and three of the normal horses responded strongly to the culicoides extract. The skin reactions in the affected horses reached their maxima within 4 h in the majority of animals. Skin reactivity to culicoides was transferred to normal horses with serum from affected animals confirming that the reaction was an immediate hypersensitivity reaction. Thr...
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in the horse. 1: Nature of the disease.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1983   Volume 15, Issue 3 203-206 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1983.tb01764.x
McPherson EA, Thomson JR.The aetiology, pathophysiological changes, pathology and clinical signs of the disease as presently understood are discussed. The condition appears to be a hypersensitivity of the respiratory system in some horses to poor quality hay and straw. Micropolyspora faeni is the chief agent identified in the northern part of the United Kingdom. In other locations, the chief agent is probably different. The principal changes are spasm of the airways and bronchiolitis of the small airways. Onset may be acute or insidious. The chief clinical signs are well known but the disease process is reversible if ...
Allergen-specific ELISA for horse IgE.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    July 1, 1983   Volume 4, Issue 5-6 555-564 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(83)90064-8
Suter M, Fey H.An enzyme-linked immuno sorbent assay (ELISA) for measuring horse IgE specific to ovalbumin, bencylpenicilloic acid and odinitrocarboxyphenol is described. We used a sandwich type of ELISA by which horse serum was incubated in antigen-coated tubes containing one additional polystyrene ball, followed by rabbit anti horse IgE serum. The tubes were then incubated with biotinylated goat anti rabbit globulin followed by avidin coupled to phosphatase. Endpoint titrations were compared. The ELISA is highly reproducible due to the pretreatment of the polystyrene with glutaraldehyde. The increased anti...
Epidemiological and immunological studies of sweet itch in horses in Israel.
The Veterinary record    May 28, 1983   Volume 112, Issue 22 521-524 doi: 10.1136/vr.112.22.521
Braverman Y, Ungar-Waron H, Frith K, Adler H, Danieli Y, Baker KP, Quinn PJ.A survey of sweet itch in horses in Israel based on a questionnaire to owners reported that 158 of 723 horses (21.8 per cent) had sweet itch lesions. The results indicated that the likelihood of a horse acquiring sweet itch decreased with increasing altitude but no definite association with rainfall zones was evident. Variation in the density of the horse population, however, obscured these observations. In the population surveyed, stallions were more sensitive than mares and pale horses appeared to be less sensitive than dark ones, but the sample size of this latter group was much smaller. In...
Dermatitis in the horse caused by Acarus farinae.
The Veterinary record    April 16, 1983   Volume 112, Issue 16 385-386 doi: 10.1136/vr.112.16.385
Norval J, McPherson EA.No abstract available
Perspective on the black walnut toxicity problem–apparent allergies to man and horse.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1983   Volume 73, Issue 2 204-207 
MacDaniels LH.No abstract available
A reagin-like antibody in horse serum. II. Anti-human IgE induced reversed cutaneous anaphylaxis-like responses in horse skin.
Veterinary research communications    March 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 2 111-122 doi: 10.1007/BF02214903
Matthews AG, Imlah P, McPherson EA.Fc specific anti-human IgE serum induced prolonged reversed cutaneous anaphylaxis (RCA)-like reactions in horse skin. Morphologically and histologically, these reactions resembled passively induced late cutaneous anaphylaxis responses in human skin, but differed from reversed passive Arthus responses induced in horse skin using anti-horse IgG serum. The induction of RCA-like responses in horse skin by anti-human IgE indicates shared Fc antigenic determinants on human IgE and a horse homocytotropic or reagin-like antibody.
[Contact eczema due to metal ion allergy in a drill show horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1983   Volume 11, Issue 3 339-344 
Fabry H.No abstract available
A reagin-like antibody in horse serum: 1. Occurrence and some biological properties.
Veterinary research communications    January 1, 1983   Volume 6, Issue 1 13-23 doi: 10.1007/BF02214891
Matthews AG, Imlah P, McPherson EA.The demonstration of a reagin-like antibody against Culicoides pulicaris extract in the serum of horses and ponies affected with recurrent seasonal dermatitis (sweet itch) is reported. This antibody can confer Prauznitz-Küstner (P-K) sensitivity on homologous skin for up to 5 days and, like human IgE, is thermolabile and susceptible to 2-mercaptoethanol reduction. It is eluted on diethylaminoethyl dextran-52 anion exchange chromatography independently of IgG, IgG(T) and IgM, and its elution characteristics indicate similarity in net molecular charge to human IgE. The P-K response observed in ...
Ovalbumin-induced lung disease in the pony: role of vagal mechanisms.
Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology    September 1, 1982   Volume 53, Issue 3 719-725 doi: 10.1152/jappl.1982.53.3.719
Derksen FJ, Robinson NE, Slocombe RF.In awake sensitized ponies, we studied the effect of aerosol ovalbumin challenge on ventilation, pulmonary mechanics, lung volume, and gas exchange before and after vagal blockade. We also challenged the left lung and measured respiratory rate (f) and right and left respiratory system resistance (RrsR, RrsL) before and after both left and bilateral vagal section. Bilateral ovalbumin aerosol challenge increased f, minute ventilation (VE), total respiratory system resistance (Rrs), and minimal volume, decreased dynamic compliance, total lung capacity, and arterial oxygen tension, and was without...
Chronic eosinophilic gastroenteritis in the horse.
Veterinary pathology    September 1, 1982   Volume 19, Issue 5 486-496 doi: 10.1177/030098588201900504
Pass DA, Bolton JR.Four cases of chronic eosinophilic gastroenteritis in horses are described. The disease was manifested clinically by weight loss, malabsorption and diarrhea of soft, formless feces. A chronic inflammatory reaction, with diffuse and focal eosinophilic infiltrates, was present in the esophagus, stomach, small and large intestine, and mesenteric lymph nodes. The cause of the lesion was not determined but was thought to the due to an ingested allergen, as the lesion is indicative of an on-going, immediate hypersensitivity reaction. One horse had generalized acanthosis, hyperkeratosis, and ulcerati...
[Histamine release from equine leucocytes provoked by fungal allergens].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    July 6, 1982   Volume 89, Issue 7 267-270 
Gerber H, Hockenjos P, Lazary S, Kings M, de Weck A.No abstract available
Bronchoscopy and cytological examination of bronchial secretions of horses with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Le Poumon et le coeur    January 1, 1982   Volume 38, Issue 5 311-316 
Deegen E, Müller P, Petzoldt K.On the basis of cytological similarities in chronic obstructive disease (COPD) in human beings and in horses during 1981 a total number of 144 horses with COPD were examined. Bronchial secretions were taken under endoscopic control and stained with a modified Hansel staining procedure. Whereas 26 horses did not exhibit signs of allergic reactions cytologically and 94 horses showed low amounts of eosinocytes and/or mast cells in their secretion; only the secretions of 24 horses (16,67%) were characterized by fairly high contents of these allergy associated cells and low numbers of neutrophilic ...
[Practical demonstration of allergy-associated cells in the bronchial secretion of horses with lung diseases].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1981   Volume 9, Issue 3 353-358 
Raidt J, Petzoldt K.No abstract available
Suppressor T cells in tolerance to deaggregated horse anti-human thymocyte globulin in man.
Transplantation    April 1, 1980   Volume 29, Issue 4 324-328 doi: 10.1097/00007890-198004000-00013
Abdou NI, Amare M, Sagawa A, Abdou NL.To understand the mechanism by which deaggregated horse anti-human thymocyte globulin (dATG) fails to induce untoward immunological reactions in man, three patients who received ATG and two patients who received dATG were studied for evidence of sensitization or tolerance to the foreign globulin. The ATG but not the dATG recipients developed allergic or serum sickness reactions; antihorse serum antibody could be detected in their serum and their blood cells proliferated in vitro in the presence of horse serum and secreted antihorse serum antibodies (P less than 0.001). Tolerance of the dATG re...
Pharmacological and immunological aspects of histamine release from horse leucocytes.
International archives of allergy and applied immunology    January 1, 1980   Volume 62, Issue 4 397-408 doi: 10.1159/000232542
Kings MA, de Weck AL.Pharmacological histamine releasing agents, such as compound 48/80, poly-L-lysine, adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH; beta 1-24 available commercially as Synacthen), catecholamines, purine bases, etc., are well known to induce histamine release from rat peritoneal mast cells and mast cells of other species; and to a lesser extent from peripheral blood leucocytes. It is reported in this paper that several of these potent histamine-releasing agents induce little or no histamine release from horse leucocytes. In particular the calcium ionophore A 23187 induced no histamine release. On the other ...
The effects of sodium cromoglycate on antigen inhalation challenge in two horses affected with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    November 1, 1979   Volume 1, Issue 1 89-95 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(79)90010-2
Murphy JR, McPherson EA, Lawson GH.80 mg sodium cromoglycate (SCG) was administered by inhalation to two COPD-affected animals known to have respiratory hypersensitivity to Micropolyspora faeni. SCG treatment 20-30 minutes prior to inhalation challenge with M. faeni prevented exacerbation of respiratory disease, usually seen 4-8 hours after challenge. duration of protection against antigen challenge after a single SCG treatment was 4-5 days. The duration of protection was not prolonged by reducing the frequency of antigen challenge. Multiple antigen challenge, using M. faeni and Aspergillus fumigatus, shortened the protective p...
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in horses: aetiological studies: responses to intradermal and inhalation antigenic challenge.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1979   Volume 11, Issue 3 159-166 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1979.tb01330.x
McPherson EA, Lawson GH, Murphy JR, Nicholson JM, Breeze RG, Pirie HM.Micropolyspora faeni and Aspergillus fumigatus were identified as common causes of respiratory hypersensitivity in horses affected with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Rye grass pollen and an Actinomycete evoked respiratory allergy in a few horses. Not infrequently, individual horses were found to have respiratory hypersensitivity to two or more antigens. The methods used to examine for allergy were intradermal testing and inhalation challenge with environmental antigens. An intradermal test using an M faeni extract was demonstrated to be suitable for diagnostic use in horses pre...
Chemical mediators of immediate hypersensitivity reactions.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Large animal practice    May 1, 1979   Volume 1, Issue 1 35-42 doi: 10.1016/s0196-9846(17)30196-9
Leid RW.The investigation of the mast cell-basophil products has progressed from studies directed solely at implicating histamine or serotonin in allergic diseases to molecular definitions of pathways to target cell activation and mediator release. In addition, within the last several years the detection and molecular characterization of the many other mediators of immediate hypersensitivity have begun. This area should continue to prove a fruitful arena in the future. Identification of the physiologic importance of these mediators in the heaves syndrome or other potential equine allergic syndromes ma...
The role of allergy in chronic pulmonary disease of horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 1, 1979   Volume 174, Issue 3 277-281 
Halliwell RE, Fleischman JB, Mackay-Smith M, Beech J, Gunson DE.Twenty-five horses with chronic pulmonary disease were skin tested with allergenic extracts of 24 molds, 4 thermophilic actinomyces, barn dust, hay dust, soya-bean mill dust, and grain mill dust. The results were compared with those obtained on 25 normal horses. Between the 2 groups of horses, there was a highly significant difference in positive skin test results at 30 minutes and 4 hours.
Pharmacological studies on the pulmonary vein of the horse. I. Effects of selected spasmogens.
Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology    October 1, 1978   Volume 56, Issue 5 812-817 doi: 10.1139/y78-127
Hanna CJ, Eyre P.Horses suffer from a respiratory condition, similar to human allergic asthma, that is characterized by severe dyspnea, wheezing, coughing, and mucus production. Mediator substances released during the allergic reaction may contract airways and pulmonary vasculature. Nothing is known of the effects of autacoids and other vasoactive substances on equine pulmonary vessels. Therefore, spiral strips of equine pulmonary vein were prepared in vitro and the effects of histamine (H), 5-hydroxytryptamine (5HT), bradykinin (BK), carbachol (Carb), and phenylephrine (phen) were studied. The order of contra...
A report on clinical aspects and histopathology of sweet itch.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 4 243-248 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02271.x
Baker KP, Quinn PJ.Sweet itch is an intensely pruritic dermatitis of horses recurring annually in Ireland from April to November. The tissue changes of sweet itch have similarities to immediate-type hypersensitivity reactions which occur in skin sensitised to the saliva of bloodsucking insects. There was subepidermal oedema, and marked eosinophilia; the blood vessels were tortuous and enlarged. Microfilaria were not found in serial sections of lesions of 5 affected horses. The histopathology of the immediate dermal remal reaction to the intradermal injection of Culicoides extract shows dermal vasodilation and eo...
Skin hypersensitivity to equid herpesvirus type 1 in horses.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    June 1, 1978   Volume 25, Issue 5 431-434 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1978.tb00749.x
Frymus T, Woyciechowska S, Schollenberger A, Poliwoda A.No abstract available