Analyze Diet

Topic:Disease control

Disease control in horses encompasses the strategies and measures implemented to prevent, manage, and eradicate infectious and non-infectious diseases within equine populations. This field involves the study of pathogen transmission, host-pathogen interactions, and the development of effective vaccination and biosecurity protocols. Disease control also includes monitoring and surveillance of equine health to identify outbreaks and implement timely interventions. Key aspects of disease control in horses involve understanding the epidemiology of equine diseases, improving diagnostic techniques, and enhancing treatment options. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various methodologies, technologies, and practices aimed at controlling diseases in horses, with a focus on improving overall equine health and welfare.
Risk factors for influenza infection in vaccinated racehorses: lessons from an outbreak in Newmarket, UK in 2003.
Vaccine    September 6, 2007   Volume 25, Issue 43 7520-7529 doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2007.08.038
Barquero N, Daly JM, Newton JR.Between March and May 2003, clinical equine influenza was confirmed among vaccinated racehorses in Newmarket, UK. A particular feature was that 2-year-old horses were apparently less susceptible than older animals. Statistical analyses comparing infected and non-infected animals showed the unusual, apparently counter-intuitive inverse age effect was principally explained by more recent vaccination among younger animals, despite broadly equivalent antibody levels between age groups. There was novel evidence for sexual dimorphism in susceptibility to infection and data supported the hypothesis t...
West Nile virus outbreak detection using syndromic monitoring in horses.
Vector borne and zoonotic diseases (Larchmont, N.Y.)    September 5, 2007   Volume 7, Issue 3 403-410 doi: 10.1089/vbz.2006.0593
Leblond A, Hendrikx P, Sabatier P.Recent outbreaks of West Nile virus-associated (WNV) diseases, both in the old World and Americas, underline the importance for early warning systems that rapidly identify emerging and re-emerging diseases and thus help in their control. Traditional approaches of disease monitoring become less reliable and increasingly costly when used for rare health-related events, such as WNV outbreaks in southern France. The objective of this work was to discuss methodological issues related to syndromic monitoring of WNV-associated disease in Camargue horses by veterinary practitioners. Tracking cases of ...
Occurrence of anthelmintic resistant equine cyathostome populations in central and southern Italy.
Preventive veterinary medicine    August 24, 2007   Volume 82, Issue 3-4 314-320 doi: 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2007.07.006
Traversa D, Klei TR, Iorio R, Paoletti B, Lia RP, Otranto D, Sparagano OA, Giangaspero A.In the present survey, 276 horses bred on 16 farms located in central and southern Italy were investigated for the presence of drug resistant cyathostomes by a Fecal Egg Count Reduction Test (FECRT). Sixteen to 20 animals were selected on each farm and randomly assigned to one of four equally sized treatment groups. Groups were treated with fenbendazole, pyrantel pamoate, ivermectin or moxidectin. Resistance to fenbendazole was declared on six farms (37.5%) and suspected in two farms (12.5%), with FECR values ranging from 41% to 88.3%. Resistance to pyrantel was found in two farms (12.5%) and ...
Statistical approach to measure the efficacy of anthelmintic treatment on horse farms.
Parasitology    August 23, 2007   Volume 134, Issue Pt.14 2027-2039 doi: 10.1017/S003118200700340X
Vidyashankar AN, Kaplan RM, Chan S.Resistance to anthelmintics in gastrointestinal nematodes of livestock is a serious problem and appropriate methods are required to identify and quantify resistance. However, quantification and assessment of resistance depend on an accurate measure of treatment efficacy, and current methodologies fail to properly address the issue. The fecal egg count reduction test (FECRT) is the practical gold standard for measuring anthelmintic efficacy on farms, but these types of data are fraught with high variability that greatly impacts the accuracy of inference on efficacy. This paper develops a statis...
Equine disease surveillance, January to March 2007.
The Veterinary record    August 19, 2007   Volume 161, Issue 3 79-82 doi: 10.1136/vr.161.3.79
No abstract available
Boosting in equine influenza vaccination schedules: timing and time for a re-evaluation of requirements of national and international authorities.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    August 16, 2007   Volume 174, Issue 3 449-450 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2007.06.012
Wood JL, Mumford JA, Mair TS, Slater J.No abstract available
Delivery of health and husbandry improvements to working animals in Africa.
Tropical animal health and production    August 9, 2007   Volume 38, Issue 2 93-101 doi: 10.1007/s11250-006-4363-y
Pearson RA, Krecek RC.Problems have been identified in the delivery of extension messages about the maintenance of healthy and well-fed working animals. The different factors that need to be considered in developing effective disease control and prevention programmes for working oxen and equids including vector-borne diseases, helminth disease, and vaccination programmes have been reported and discussed and experiences in improving husbandry including footcare, harness, and worm management reported. Most draught animals are owned by people who lack the financial means to pay for or to access the information needed ...
Comparative efficacies of three commercially available vaccines against West Nile Virus (WNV) in a short-duration challenge trial involving an equine WNV encephalitis model.
Clinical and vaccine immunology : CVI    August 8, 2007   Volume 14, Issue 11 1465-1471 doi: 10.1128/CVI.00249-07
Seino KK, Long MT, Gibbs EP, Bowen RA, Beachboard SE, Humphrey PP, Dixon MA, Bourgeois MA.We used a severe challenge model that produces clinical West Nile virus (WNV) disease to test the efficacy of three commercially available equine WNV vaccines in horses. Twenty-four healthy, WNV-seronegative horses of varying ages and genders were placed, in random and blind manner, into three trial groups consisting of eight horses each; two horses in each group received (i) an inactivated WNV vaccine (K-WN), (ii) a modified-live vaccine (CP-WN) containing the WNV prM and E proteins expressed by a canarypox vector, (iii) a live-chimera vaccine (WN-FV) containing WNV prM and E proteins express...
Could we eradicate strangles in equids?
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 3, 2007   Volume 231, Issue 3 377-378 doi: 10.2460/javma.231.3.377
Prescott JF, Timoney JF.No abstract available
Equine rescue and response activities in Louisiana in the aftermath of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    August 3, 2007   Volume 231, Issue 3 384-392 doi: 10.2460/javma.231.3.384
McConnico RS, French DD, Clark B, Mortensen KE, Littlefield M, Moore RM.No abstract available
Evidence-based medicine in equine critical care.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    July 10, 2007   Volume 23, Issue 2 293-316 doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2007.04.001
Bedenice D.One of the fundamental skills required for practicing evidence-based medicine is the development of a well-built clinical question, which specifies the patient group or problem, intervention, and outcome of interest. For this purpose, various "levels of evidence" have been developed in the human literature, which rank the validity of evidence. Our established conclusions and advice are thus supported by specific "grades of recommendations," which are intended to give an indication of the "strength" of a clinical recommendation. This article was compiled with these principles in mind.
Establishment of a panel of reference Trypanosoma evansi and Trypanosoma equiperdum strains for drug screening.
Veterinary parasitology    July 10, 2007   Volume 148, Issue 2 114-121 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2007.05.020
Gillingwater K, Büscher P, Brun R.The animal pathogenic protozoan, Trypanosoma evansi, leads to a wasting disease in equines, cattle and camels, commonly known as Surra. It is extensively distributed geographically with a wide range of mammalian hosts and causes great economical loss. Trypanosoma equiperdum causes a venereal disease called Dourine in horses and donkeys. Chemotherapy appears to be the most effective form of control for T. evansi, whereas infections caused by T. equiperdum are considered incurable. Due to emerging drug resistance, efficient control of T. evansi is severely threatened, emphasising the urgent need...
Epidemiological perspectives on Hendra virus infection in horses and flying foxes.
Australian veterinary journal    July 7, 2007   Volume 85, Issue 7 268-270 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2007.00170.x
Field HE, Breed AC, Shield J, Hedlefs RM, Pittard K, Pott B, Summers PM.No abstract available
What is your diagnosis? Onchocerciasis.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 4, 2007   Volume 231, Issue 1 39-40 doi: 10.2460/javma.231.1.39
Metry CA, Beard DM, Simon E.No abstract available
Equine influenza in England.
The Veterinary record    June 19, 2007   Volume 160, Issue 24 851 doi: 10.1136/vr.160.24.851
Newton R, Elton D, Bryant N, Rash A, Hammond TA.No abstract available
Virginiamycin and laminitis research.
The Veterinary record    June 19, 2007   Volume 160, Issue 24 852 doi: 10.1136/vr.160.24.852-a
Menzies-Gow N.No abstract available
Is there a benefit from an early booster vaccination in the control of equine influenza?
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    June 7, 2007   Volume 174, Issue 3 592-598 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2007.03.004
Heldens JG, van Loon AA, van de Zande S.Conventional equine influenza vaccination schedules consist of a primary course of two vaccinations given 4-6 weeks apart followed by a third vaccination (booster) given approximately 5 months later. In between the primary course and the third vaccination, horses are generally considered not to be adequately protected against influenza. This study aimed to investigate whether Thoroughbred foals would benefit from a vaccination schedule in which the third vaccination was given earlier than in conventional vaccination schedules. The vaccines used were an inactivated whole virus equine influenza ...
Effective priming of foals born to immune dams against influenza by a canarypox-vectored recombinant influenza H3N8 vaccine.
Journal of comparative pathology    June 7, 2007   Volume 137 Suppl 1 S76-S80 doi: 10.1016/j.jcpa.2007.04.016
Minke JM, Toulemonde CE, Dinic S, Cozette V, Cullinane A, Audonnet JC.A classical limitation of early life immunization is the interference by maternally derived antibodies, which are known to inhibit the immune response to modified-live and killed vaccines. Several studies have convincingly shown that even minute amounts of maternally derived antibodies against equine influenza can strongly interfere with successful vaccination of foals born to immune mares. In this study we evaluated the response of foals born to vaccinated mares to immunization with a canarypox-vectored recombinant vaccine against equine influenza virus H3N8. The recombinant vaccine was able ...
Serological evidence for West Nile virus infection in horses in Croatia.
The Veterinary record    June 5, 2007   Volume 160, Issue 22 772-773 doi: 10.1136/vr.160.22.772
Madić J, Savini G, Di Gennaro A, Monaco F, Jukić B, Kovac S, Rudan N, Listes E.No abstract available
Strangles vaccines in trouble again.
Equine veterinary journal    May 25, 2007   Volume 39, Issue 3 196 doi: 10.2746/042516407x196744
Timoney JF.No abstract available
The clinical evidence article by Proudman et al. (2007).
Equine veterinary journal    May 25, 2007   Volume 39, Issue 3 287 
Freeman DE.No abstract available
Statistical approaches to uncertainty: P values and confidence intervals unpacked.
Equine veterinary journal    May 25, 2007   Volume 39, Issue 3 275-276 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2007.tb00999.x
Doll H, Carney S.No abstract available
Experimental infections with West Nile virus.
Current opinion in infectious diseases    May 2, 2007   Volume 20, Issue 3 293-297 doi: 10.1097/QCO.0b013e32816b5cad
Bowen RA, Nemeth NM.West Nile virus emerged recently in North America as a serious human and animal pathogen. This review summarizes the use of experimental infections with West Nile virus in diverse vertebrate species that have been used to answer fundamental questions about the host response, pathogenesis of West Nile virus infection and virus evolution. Results: West Nile virus has an extremely broad vertebrate host range. Infection of common species of birds has defined those with high vs. low potential to serve as amplifying hosts for the virus. In general, mammals (primates, horses, companion animals) are d...
Study (1991 to 2001) of drug-resistant Population B small strongyles in critical tests in horses in Kentucky at the termination of a 40-year investigation.
Parasitology research    April 29, 2007   Volume 101, Issue 3 689-701 doi: 10.1007/s00436-007-0535-6
Lyons ET, Tolliver SC, Collins SS.Population B, drug-resistant small strongyles have been studied in naturally infected horses in Kentucky for more than 40 years. These parasites first were found to be resistant to phenothiazine (PTZ) and thiabendazole (TBZ), later to other parasiticides. Studies have been on evaluation of antiparasitic efficacy of several compounds, especially the benzimidazoles, against Population B small strongyles in clinical (field) tests (1959-1983) on the commercial farm of origin and in clinical and critical tests (1966-2001) at the University of Kentucky (UK) research farm. Research on these nematodes...
An epidemiological investigation of the African horsesickness outbreak in the Western Cape Province of South Africa in 2004 and its relevance to the current equine export protocol.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    April 27, 2007   Volume 77, Issue 4 191-196 doi: 10.4102/jsava.v77i4.376
Sinclair M, Bührmann G, Gummow B.African Horsesickness (AHS) is a controlled disease in South Africa. The country is divided into an infected area and a control area. An outbreak of AHS in the control area can result in a ban of exports for at least 2 years. A retrospective epidemiological study was carried out on data collected during the 2004 AHS outbreak in the surveillance zone of the AHS control area in the Western Cape Province. The objective of this study was to describe the 2004 outbreak and compare it with the 1999 AHS outbreak in the same area. As part of the investigation, a questionnaire survey was conducted in th...
Equine rhinosporidiosis: an exotic disease in the UK.
The Veterinary record    April 24, 2007   Volume 160, Issue 16 552-554 doi: 10.1136/vr.160.16.552
Leeming G, Hetzel U, Campbell T, Kipar A.No abstract available
Efficacy of 2,6-dichlorophenol lure to control Dermacentor nitens.
Veterinary parasitology    April 24, 2007   Volume 147, Issue 1-2 155-160 doi: 10.1016/j.vetpar.2007.02.037
Borges LM, Ferreira LA, da Silva LS, de Oliveira RA, Mussi SV, Faria KA, Melo LS, Abud LJ, Costa GL, Soares SF.This study was carried out with the objective of evaluating the efficacy of a 2,6-dichlorophenol (2,6-DCP) lure to control Dermacentor nitens (Acari: Ixodidae). Slow-release formulations of the pheromone formulated with and without cypermethrin were prepared. Olfactometer bioassays were used to define the best dose of the pheromone and to evaluate the effect of cypermethrin with 2,6-DCP attractiveness. Sexually active males were released 15 cm from 2 cmx1 cm pieces of polypropylene treated with different odors: 2,6-DCP in a liposphere system (1.5, 30 and 300 microg--without cypermethrin and 30...
Occurrence of roundworm (Parascaris equorum) in horses from small farms based on necropsy.
Wiadomosci parazytologiczne    April 17, 2007   Volume 52, Issue 4 323-326 
Kornaś S, Skalska M, Nowosad B.The objective of this study was to evaluate the level of roundworm infection in working horses slaughtered for meat. In these horses anthelmintics had not been used. Methods: Roundworms were collected post-mortem from small intestines of 83 horses. Results: The mean prevalence of roundworm infection was 12% and intensity--46.7 specimens per horse. Infection was found only in foals; 10 animals were infected (45.4%) among the 22 examined. Due to common occurrence of roundworms (Parascaris equorum) in foals this nematode control should focus particularly on regular anthelmintic treatment of young...
Epidemiology of the acute abdominal crisis: will it challenge current knowledge?
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    April 8, 2007   Volume 175, Issue 2 151-152 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2007.02.012
Dart A.No abstract available
Measures of association as used to address therapy, harm, and aetiology questions.
Equine veterinary journal    March 24, 2007   Volume 39, Issue 2 99-100 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2007.tb00968.x
Carney S, Doll H.No abstract available
1 54 55 56 57 58 120