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Topic:Disease Surveillance

Disease surveillance in horses involves the systematic collection, analysis, and interpretation of health data to monitor and manage equine diseases. This process aids in the early detection of outbreaks, tracking of disease trends, and evaluation of control measures. Surveillance systems may incorporate various data sources, including clinical reports, laboratory testing, and field observations. These systems can focus on infectious diseases, such as equine influenza and West Nile virus, or non-infectious conditions affecting horse populations. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore methodologies, technologies, and outcomes associated with disease surveillance in equine populations.
Eastern tent caterpillars (Malacosoma americanum) cause mare reproductive loss syndrome.
Journal of insect physiology    March 17, 2004   Volume 50, Issue 2-3 185-193 doi: 10.1016/j.jinsphys.2003.11.008
Webb BA, Barney WE, Dahlman DL, DeBorde SN, Weer C, Williams NM, Donahue JM, McDowell KJ.A new equine abortigenic disease, mare reproductive loss syndrome (MRLS), was recognized and significantly impacted the Ohio Valley in the springs of 2001 and 2002. MRLS caused approximately 330 million US dollars in losses in 2001. An epidemiological investigation of MRLS associated occurrence of the disease with exposure to eastern tent caterpillars (M. americanum). This work investigates the epidemiological association between M. americanum and MRLS to determine if this association was correlative or causative. A pilot study and simulated exposure to M. americanum and their excreta on pastu...
The current challenges of dourine: difficulties in differentiating Trypanosoma equiperdum within the subgenus Trypanozoon.
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)    March 10, 2004   Volume 22, Issue 3 1087-1096 doi: 10.20506/rst.22.3.1460
Zablotskij VT, Georgiu C, de Waal T, Clausen PH, Claes F, Touratier L.During its 20th annual meeting in Paris in May 1999, the OIE (World organisation for animal health) Ad Hoc Group on Non-Tsetse Transmitted Animal Trypanosomoses expressed the following concerns about dourine: the discrepancies in some of the results of the complement fixation test (CFT), which is the only international diagnostic test officially recognised by the International Organisation for the Transportation of Equidae; the persistence of suspected cases of dourine in some Asian, European and African countries; the impossibility of differentiating Trypanosoma equiperdum from Trypanosoma ev...
Prevalence of antibodies against Saint Louis encephalitis and Jamestown Canyon viruses in California horses.
Comparative immunology, microbiology and infectious diseases    March 6, 2004   Volume 27, Issue 3 209-215 doi: 10.1016/j.cimid.2003.11.001
Nelson DM, Gardner IA, Chiles RF, Balasuriya UB, Eldridge BF, Scott TW, Reisen WK, Maclachlan NJ.Jamestown Canyon (JC) and Saint Louis encephalitis (SLE) viruses are mosquito-transmitted viruses that have long been present in California. The objective of this study was to determine the seroprevalence of these two viruses in horses prior to the introduction of West Nile (WN) virus. Approximately 15% of serum samples collected in 1998 from 425 horses on 44 equine operations horses throughout California had serum antibodies to JC virus, whereas antibodies were not detected to SLE virus. The results indicate that horses in California were commonly infected prior to 1998 with mosquito-transmit...
Association between cribbing and entrapment of the small intestine in the epiploic foramen in horses: 68 cases (1991-2002).
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    March 3, 2004   Volume 224, Issue 4 562-564 doi: 10.2460/javma.2004.224.562
Archer DC, Freeman DE, Doyle AJ, Proudman CJ, Edwards GB.To determine whether there was an association between a history of cribbing and epiploic foramen entrapment (EFE) of the small intestine in horses. Methods: Retrospective study. Methods: 68 horses examined at the University of Illinois or the University of Liverpool veterinary teaching hospitals. Methods: For horses examined at the University of Illinois that underwent surgery because of strangulating small intestine lesions, information about cribbing was obtained through telephone calls with owners. For horses examined at the University of Liverpool that underwent surgery for colic for any r...
West Nile virus: an overview of its spread in Europe and the Mediterranean basin in contrast to its spread in the Americas. Zeller HG, Schuffenecker I.West Nile (WN) virus is a mosquito-transmitted flavivirus. It is widely distributed in Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and southern Europe and was recently introduced to North America. Birds are involved in the cycle of transmission as amplifying hosts. Humans and horses are considered accidental dead-end hosts. WN fever was initially considered a minor arbovirosis, usually inducing a nonsymptomatic or a mild flu-like illness in humans, but some cases of encephalitis associated with fatalities were reported in Israel in the 1950s. After two silent decades, several human and equine outbreaks of ...
Deaths from eastern equine encephalitis reported in the south.
The American journal of nursing    January 27, 2004   Volume 103, Issue 11 27 
No abstract available
Avian host preference by vectors of eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    January 27, 2004   Volume 69, Issue 6 641-647 
Hassan HK, Cupp EW, Hill GE, Katholi CR, Klingler K, Unnasch TR.An important variable in the amplification and escape from the enzootic cycle of the arboviral encephalitides is the degree of contact between avian hosts and mosquito vectors. To analyze this interaction in detail, blood-fed mosquitoes that were confirmed vectors of eastern equine encephalomyelitis (EEE) virus were collected in 2002 from an enzootic site in central Alabama during the time this virus was actively transmitted. Avian-derived blood meals were identified to the species level of the host, and the proportion derived from each species was compared with the overall composition of the ...
AAEP tackles tough issues in the Big Easy.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 23, 2004   Volume 224, Issue 2 184-187 
Kuehn BM.No abstract available
West Nile virus: epidemiology and ecology in North America.
Advances in virus research    January 13, 2004   Volume 61 185-234 doi: 10.1016/s0065-3527(03)61005-5
Komar N.No abstract available
Development of an immunochromatographic test with recombinant EMA-2 for the rapid detection of antibodies against Babesia equi in horses.
Journal of clinical microbiology    January 13, 2004   Volume 42, Issue 1 359-361 doi: 10.1128/JCM.42.1.359-361.2004
Huang X, Xuan X, Xu L, Zhang S, Yokoyama N, Suzuki N, Igarashi I.An immunochromatographic test (BeICT) for the rapid detection of antibodies against Babesia equi was developed. It clearly differentiated B. equi-infected horses from B. caballi-infected and uninfected horses. The agreement with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay results was 96.7% in the detection of field sera. The results suggest that BeICT is rapid, simple, reliable, and suitable for use to detect B. equi infection in the field.
Ontario Equine Infectious Disease Report now available to equine practitioners throughout Canada.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 2, 2004   Volume 44, Issue 12 953 
Weese JS.No abstract available
Agricultural tasks and injuries among Kentucky farm children: results of the Farm Family Health and Hazard Surveillance Project.
Southern medical journal    December 31, 2003   Volume 96, Issue 12 1203-1212 doi: 10.1097/01.SMJ.0000082014.94642.06
Browning SR, Westneat SC, Donnelly C, Reed D.This population-based study reports the prevalent agricultural tasks and the 1-year cumulative incidence of injuries in a sample of 999 children < or = 18 years old living on family farms in Kentucky. Methods: Data were collected in 1994 to 1995 for the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Farm Family Health and Hazard Surveillance Project. A random sample of farm children in 60 Kentucky counties was selected using a cross-sectional, two-stage cluster design. Respondents, primarily mothers, completed a 30-minute telephone interview about work-related tasks and injuries expe...
Rabies surveillance in the United States during 2002.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 24, 2003   Volume 223, Issue 12 1736-1748 doi: 10.2460/javma.2003.223.1736
Krebs JW, Wheeling JT, Childs JE.During 2002, 49 states and Puerto Rico reported 7,967 cases of rabies in nonhuman animals and 3 cases in human beings to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an increase of 7.2% from the 7,436 cases in non-human animals and 1 case in a human being reported in 2001. More than 92% (7,375 cases) were in wild animals, whereas 7.4% (592) were in domestic species (compared with 93.3% in wild animals and 6.7% in domestic species in 2001). Compared with cases reported in 2001, the numbers of cases reported in 2002 increased among all major reporting groups with the exception of swine and ro...
Detection of Salmonella organisms and assessment of a protocol for removal of contamination in horse stalls at a veterinary teaching hospital.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 11, 2003   Volume 223, Issue 11 1640-1644 doi: 10.2460/javma.2003.223.1640
Alinovi CA, Ward MP, Couëtil LL, Wu CC.To assess methods of detecting environmental contamination with Salmonella organisms and evaluate a cleaning and disinfection protocol for horse stalls in a veterinary teaching hospital. Methods: Original study. Methods: 37 horses with diarrhea likely to be caused by Salmonella infection and their stall environments. Methods: Fecal samples were collected from horses daily during hospitalization; samples were obtained from stall sites after cleaning and application of disinfectants. Fecal and environmental samples were cultured for Salmonella spp and tested via polymerase chain reaction (PCR) a...
[Epizootic equine influenza in Tunisia].
Archives de l'Institut Pasteur de Tunis    December 9, 2003   Volume 78, Issue 1-4 69-73 
Chabchoub A, Landolsi F, Zientara S, Amira A, Mejri M, Ghorbel A, Ghram A.The authors describe an equine influenza epizootic that occurred in Tunisia during February and March 1998 in the regions of Tozeur, Sousse and Tunis. They relate the symptoms, the different stages of diagnosis and the serological results.
[Glanders–an eradicable disease–or a threat?].
Casopis lekaru ceskych    December 6, 2003   Volume 140, Issue 24 752-754 
Pospísil L.Glanders (malleus), attacking equids and transmissible to humans, does not occur in our geographical area any more, but world-wide eradication has not yet been achieved. Cases of glanders have been reported from India, Iraq, Mongolia and China and in 2001 also from South America. The disease is caused by Burkholderia mallei (earlied known as Bacillus, Pfeiferella, Loefflerella, Malleomyces, Actinobacillus, or Pseudomonas mallei). The continual interest of microbiologists in the causative agents indicates that glanders cannot be regarded as a closed historic episode. Occupational infections of ...
Seasonal dynamics of the Cayenne tick, Amblyomma cajennense on horses in Brazil.
Medical and veterinary entomology    December 4, 2003   Volume 17, Issue 4 412-416 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2915.2003.00459.x
Oliveira PR, Borges LM, Leite RC, Freitas CM.The population dynamics of all stages of the Cayenne tick, Amblyomma cajennense (Fabricius) (Acari: Ixodidae) on horses was evaluated over a period of 2 years in the district of Pedro Leopoldo, State of Minas Gerais, Brazil. Every 14 days, the left side of 20 horses was brushed for collection of immature stages; counts of adults were also undertaken. Infestation by larvae was detected from April to August, whereas nymphs were observed from June to October. Infestation by adults was detected throughout the year, and the highest population density occurred from September to March. The number of ...
Screening for West Nile virus infections of susceptible animal species in Austria.
Epidemiology and infection    November 5, 2003   Volume 131, Issue 2 1023-1027 doi: 10.1017/s0950268803001031
Weissenböck H, Hubálek Z, Halouzka J, Pichlmair A, Maderner A, Fragner K, Kolodziejek J, Loupal G, Kölbl S, Nowotny N.Avian mortality and encephalomyelitis in equines are considered good indicators for West Nile virus (WNV) activity. We retrospectively tested 385 horse sera for WNV antibodies and looked for WNV nucleic acid and/or WNV antigen in paraffin embedded tissues from 12 horses with aetiologically unresolved encephalomyelitis and 102 free-living birds of different species which had been found dead. With the exception of four horses originating from eastern European countries investigated on the occasion of transit through Austria, all horse sera were negative. Nested RT-PCR of the horse tissues yielde...
West Nile virus activity–United States, October 23-29, 2003.
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report    October 31, 2003   Volume 52, Issue 43 1053-1054 
This report summarizes West Nile virus (WNV) surveillance data reported to CDC through ArboNET as of 3 a.m., Mountain Standard Time, October 29, 2003.
[Diagnosis of Lawsonia intracellularis using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in pigs with and without diarrhea and other animal species].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    October 17, 2003   Volume 110, Issue 9 361-364 
Herbst W, Hertrampf B, Schmitt T, Weiss R, Baljer G.Lawsonia (L.) intracellularis, an obligately intracellular bacterium, causes proliferative enteropathy (PE) in swine and, occasionally, in other animals. To determine the spread of the agent among German pig herds pooled fecal samples of five animals each of clinically normal Hessian pig herds collected between november 1998 and february 1999 as well as feces (n = 1684) from individual animals representing 648 herds, sent to our laboratory by veterinarians from all parts of Germany, were tested for L. intracellularis using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR). In addition, fecal samples from di...
Chronic renal failure (CRF) in horses: personal reports.
Veterinary research communications    October 11, 2003   Volume 27 Suppl 1 437-439 doi: 10.1023/b:verc.0000014198.69275.67
Rueca F, Porciello F, Conti MB, Marchesi MC.No abstract available
Seroepidemiologic studies on Babesia equi and Babesia caballi infections in horses in Jilin province of China.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    October 9, 2003   Volume 65, Issue 9 1015-1017 doi: 10.1292/jvms.65.1015
Xu Y, Zhang S, Huang X, Bayin C, Xuan X, Igarashi I, Fujisaki K, Kabeya H, Maruyama S, Mikami T.The prevalence of equine piroplasmosis caused by Babesia equi and Babesia caballi in northeast China has remained unknown, although the People's Republic of China is recognized as an endemic country for the diseases. In the present study, we investigated the prevalence of equine piroplasmosis in Jilin province, a part of northeast China. A total of 111 serum samples were taken from horses in eastern Jilin, and examined for diagnosis of B. equi and B. caballi infections by the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays with recombinant antigens, equi merozoite antigen-1 and P48, respectively. Of the 11...
West Nile virus activity–United States, September 25-October 1, 2003.
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report    October 3, 2003   Volume 52, Issue 39 941 
This report summarizes West Nile virus (WNV) surveillance data reported to CDC through ArboNET as of 3 a.m., Mountain Daylight Time, October 1, 2003.
Small-world topology of UK racing: the potential for rapid spread of infectious agents.
Equine veterinary journal    October 1, 2003   Volume 35, Issue 6 586-589 doi: 10.2746/042516403775467298
Christley RM, French NP.The topology of the network of contacts between individuals has important effects on infectious disease dynamics within a population. Here we examine for the first time a network of contacts between training yards that occurred through racing. Objective: To explore the topology of this network and to consider the effects of the network on the potential for disease transmission. Methods: Race data from one week was analysed. Contacts were defined as occurring between trainers that raced horses in the same race and hence one trainer could contact another trainer several times. A connection was s...
Case-control study of factors associated with fibrinous pericarditis among horses in central Kentucky during spring 2001.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    September 26, 2003   Volume 223, Issue 6 832-838 doi: 10.2460/javma.2003.223.832
Seahorn JL, Slovis NM, Reimer JM, Carey VJ, Donahue JG, Cohen ND.To identify factors significantly associated with an epidemic of fibrinous pericarditis during spring 2001 among horses in central Kentucky. Methods: Case-control study. Methods: 38 horses with fibrinous pericarditis and 30 control horses examined for other reasons. Methods: A questionnaire was developed to solicit information regarding a wide range of management practices and environmental exposures from farm owners or managers. Results: The following factors were found in bivariate analyses to be significantly associated with an increased risk of pericarditis: being from a farm with mares an...
Surveillance results from the first West Nile virus transmission season in Florida, 2001.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    September 19, 2003   Volume 69, Issue 2 141-150 
Blackmore CG, Stark LM, Jeter WC, Oliveri RL, Brooks RG, Conti LA, Wiersma ST.After West Nile virus (WNV) was first detected in Florida in July 2001, intensive surveillance efforts over the following five months uncovered virus activity in 65 of the state's 67 counties with 1,106 wild birds, 492 horses, 194 sentinel chickens, and 12 people found infected with the virus. Thirteen of 28 mosquito isolations came from Culex mosquitoes. As seen in the northeastern United States, wild bird mortality was the most sensitive surveillance method. However, unlike the predominantly urban 1999 and 2000 epizootics, the Florida transmission foci were rural with most activity detected ...
West Nile virus activity–United States, September 4-10, 2003.
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report    September 13, 2003   Volume 52, Issue 36 870 
This report summarizes West Nile virus (WNV) surveillance data reported to CDC through ArboNET as of 3 a.m., Mountain Daylight Time, September 10, 2003.
Serologic evidence of West Nile virus infection in horses, Yucatan State, Mexico.
Emerging infectious diseases    August 2, 2003   Volume 9, Issue 7 857-859 doi: 10.3201/eid0907.030167
Loroño-Pino MA, Blitvich BJ, Farfán-Ale JA, Puerto FI, Blanco JM, Marlenee NL, Rosado-Paredes EP, García-Rejón JE, Gubler DJ, Calisher CH....Serum samples were obtained from 252 horses in the State of Yucatan, Mexico, from July to October 2002. Antibodies to West Nile virus were detected by epitope-blocking enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays in three (1.2%) horses and confirmed by plaque reduction neutralization test. We report the first West Nile virus activity in the State of Yucatan.
Serologic evidence of West Nile virus infection in horses, Coahuila State, Mexico.
Emerging infectious diseases    August 2, 2003   Volume 9, Issue 7 853-856 doi: 10.3201/eid0907.030166
Blitvich BJ, Fernandez-Salas I, Contreras-Cordero JF, Marlenee NL, Gonzalez-Rojas JI, Komar N, Gubler DJ, Calisher CH, Beaty BJ.Serum samples were obtained from 24 horses in the State of Coahuila, Mexico, in December 2002. Antibodies to West Nile virus were detected by epitope-blocking enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and confirmed by plaque reduction neutralization test in 15 (62.5%) horses. We report the first West Nile virus activity in northern Mexico.
Defining the clinically relevant questions that lead to the best evidence: what is evidence-based medicine?
Equine veterinary journal    July 26, 2003   Volume 35, Issue 4 333-336 doi: 10.2746/042516403776014316
Marr CM.No abstract available
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