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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.
Equine West Nile encephalitis, United States.
Emerging infectious diseases    October 9, 2001   Volume 7, Issue 4 665-669 doi: 10.3201/eid0704.010412
Ostlund EN, Crom RL, Pedersen DD, Johnson DJ, Williams WO, Schmitt BJ.After the 1999 outbreak of West Nile (WN) encephalitis in New York horses, a case definition was developed that specified the clinical signs, coupled with laboratory test results, required to classify cases of WN encephalitis in equines as either probable or confirmed. In 2000, 60 horses from seven states met the criteria for a confirmed case. The cumulative experience from clinical observations and diagnostic testing during the 1999 and 2000 outbreaks of WN encephalitis in horses will contribute to further refinement of diagnostic criteria.
Prevalence and incidence of trypanosomosis in horses and donkeys in the Gambia.
Veterinary parasitology    October 6, 2001   Volume 101, Issue 2 101-114 doi: 10.1016/s0304-4017(01)00503-9
Faye D, Pereira de Almeida PJ, Goossens B, Osaer S, Ndao M, Berkvens D, Speybroeck N, Nieberding F, Geerts S.In a study of the prevalence and incidence of trypanosomosis in horses and donkeys in two regions of the Gambia, surveys were carried out at Niamina east and Bansang south with a high and low to moderate tsetse challenge, respectively. Eleven horses and 67 donkeys were sampled monthly from August 1997 to September 1998. Blood samples were examined for trypanosomes using the buffy-coat (BC) method and polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Three primer sets were used, specific for either Trypanosoma vivax (TVW), Trypanosoma congolense (GOL) or Trypanosoma brucei (ORPHON5J). The BC results showed that...
Exposure of domestic mammals to West Nile virus during an outbreak of human encephalitis, New York City, 1999.
Emerging infectious diseases    October 5, 2001   Volume 7, Issue 4 736-738 doi: 10.3201/eid0704.010424
Komar N, Panella NA, Boyce E.We evaluated West Nile (WN) virus seroprevalence in healthy horses, dogs, and cats in New York City after an outbreak of human WN virus encephalitis in 1999. Two (3%) of 73 horses, 10 (5%) of 189 dogs, and none of 12 cats tested positive for WN virus-neutralizing antibodies. Domestic mammals should be evaluated as sentinels for local WN virus activity and predictors of the infection in humans.
West Nile virus surveillance in Connecticut in 2000: an intense epizootic without high risk for severe human disease.
Emerging infectious diseases    October 5, 2001   Volume 7, Issue 4 636-642 doi: 10.3201/eid0704.010406
Hadler J, Nelson R, McCarthy T, Andreadis T, Lis MJ, French R, Beckwith W, Mayo D, Archambault G, Cartter M.In 1999, Connecticut was one of three states in which West Nile (WN) virus actively circulated prior to its recognition. In 2000, prospective surveillance was established, including monitoring bird deaths, testing dead crows, trapping and testing mosquitoes, testing horses and hospitalized humans with neurologic illness, and conducting a human seroprevalence survey. WN virus was first detected in a dead crow found on July 5 in Fairfield County. Ultimately, 1,095 dead crows, 14 mosquito pools, 7 horses, and one mildly symptomatic person were documented with WN virus infection. None of 86 hospit...
West Nile encephalitis: an emerging disease in the United States.
Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America    October 5, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 10 1713-1719 doi: 10.1086/322700
Marfin AA, Gubler DJ.In 1999, an epidemic of West Nile virus (WNV) encephalitis occurred in New York City (NYC) and 2 surrounding New York counties. Simultaneously, an epizootic among American crows and other bird species occurred in 4 states. Indigenous transmission of WNV had never been documented in the western hemisphere until this epidemic. In 2000, the epizootic expanded to 12 states and the District of Columbia, and the epidemic continued in NYC, 5 New Jersey counties, and 1 Connecticut county. In addition to these outbreaks, several large epidemics of WNV have occurred in other regions of the world where t...
West Nile outbreak in horses in southern France, 2000: the return after 35 years.
Emerging infectious diseases    October 5, 2001   Volume 7, Issue 4 692-696 doi: 10.3201/eid0704.010417
Murgue B, Murri S, Zientara S, Durand B, Durand JP, Zeller H.On September 6, 2000, two cases of equine encephalitis caused by West Nile (WN) virus were reported in southern France (Hérault Province), near Camargue National Park, where a WN outbreak occurred in 1962. Through November 30, 76 cases were laboratory confirmed among 131 equines with neurologic disorders. The last confirmed case was on November 3, 2000. All but three cases were located in a region nicknamed "la petite Camargue," which has several large marshes, numerous colonies of migratory and resident birds, and large mosquito populations. No human case has been confirmed among clinically ...
Equine monocytic Ehrlichiosis (Potomac horse fever) in horses in Uruguay and southern Brazil. Dutra F, Schuch LF, Delucchi E, Curcio BR, Coimbra H, Raffi MB, Dellagostin O, Riet-Correa F.A disease named locally as churrío or churrido equino (i.e., equine scours) has occurred for at least 100 years in Uruguay and southern Brazil in farms along both shores of the Merín lake. This report describes cases of churrido equino and provides serologic, pathologic, and DNA-based evidence indicating that the disease is in fact equine monocytic ehrlichiosis (Potomac horse fever). Results of an epidemiological investigation conducted on an endemic farm are also presented. Clinical signs in 12 horses were fever, depression, diarrhea, dehydration, and sometimes colic and distal hind limb ed...
Reactivity of serum samples of dogs and horses tested by use of class-specific recombinant-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays for detection of granulocytic ehrlichiosis.
American journal of veterinary research    September 19, 2001   Volume 62, Issue 9 1365-1369 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2001.62.1365
Magnarelli LA, Ijdo JW, Van Andel AE, Wu C, Oliver JH, Fikrig E.To test serum samples of dogs and horses by use of class-specific recombinant-based ELISA for establishing a diagnosis of granulocytic ehrlichiosis attributable to infection with organisms from the Ehrlichia phagocytophila genogroup. Methods: Serum samples from 43 client-owned dogs and 131 horses (81 with signs of acute illness and 50 without signs of disease). Methods: Serum samples were analyzed, using ELISA with a recombinant 44-kd protein antigen for IgM and IgG antibodies to the human granulocytic ehrlichiosis (HGE) agent (NCH-1 strain). Western blot analyses, using infected human promyel...
Traceability of Equidae: a population in motion.
Revue scientifique et technique (International Office of Epizootics)    September 11, 2001   Volume 20, Issue 2 500-509 doi: 10.20506/rst.20.2.1292
Sluyter FJ.The accelerated speed of animal transport and the existence of complex and intricate movement systems have created an equine population in motion. This ease in the international movement of horses has an impact on the risk of introduction or spread of disease, specifically in relation to competition horses. Facilitating trade in Equidae, whilst simultaneously safeguarding the health status of the receiving country is a major challenge. To date, the international regulatory bodies are prepared to consider movement of registered horses as a relatively 'low risk' occurrence and thereby apply the ...
Evidence of Borna disease virus genome detection in French domestic animals and in foxes (Vulpes vulpes).
The Journal of general virology    August 22, 2001   Volume 82, Issue Pt 9 2199-2204 doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-82-9-2199
Dauphin G, Legay V, Sailleau C, Smondack S, Hammoumi S, Zientara S.Borna disease virus (BDV) is an enveloped, non-segmented negative-stranded RNA virus which belongs to the Bornaviridae family. BDV is an aetiological agent of encephalitis in horses, sheep and several other vertebrate species. In order to extend our knowledge about the presence of BDV in France, a study based on BDV RNA detection by RT-nested-PCR was done with 196 animal tissues: 171 brain samples collected from different animal species (75 horses, 59 foxes, 31 cattle, 4 dogs, 1 sheep, 1 roe deer) and 25 horse blood samples. An RNA internal standard molecule was constructed and was co-amplifie...
Contagious equine metritis in Turkey: first isolation of Taylorella equigenitalis from mares.
The Veterinary record    August 16, 2001   Volume 149, Issue 4 120-122 doi: 10.1136/vr.149.4.120
Ozgur NY, Ikiz S, Carioglu B, Kilicarslan R, Yilmaz H, Akay O, Ilgaz A.No abstract available
Virulence and viremia characteristics of 1992 epizootic subtype IC Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses and closely related enzootic subtype ID strains.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    August 16, 2001   Volume 65, Issue 1 64-69 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.2001.65.64
Wang E, Bowen RA, Medina G, Powers AM, Kang W, Chandler LM, Shope RE, Weaver SC.Following a 19-year hiatus, Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) reemerged in western Venezuela in December 1992. This outbreak is important in understanding VEE emergence because phylogenetic studies imply that sympatric, enzootic, subtype ID VEE viruses mutated to generate the epizootic/epidemic. Although the 1992-1993 strains belong to subtype IC, a serotype implicated in extensive outbreaks during the 1960s and in 1995, relatively small numbers of human and equine cases occurred in 1992-1993. We, therefore, evaluated the pathogenicity of these Venezuelan enzootic ID and epizootic IC viruse...
A cross-sectional study of colic in horses on thoroughbred training premises in the British Isles in 1997.
Equine veterinary journal    July 27, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 4 380-385 doi: 10.2746/042516401776249499
Hillyer MH, Taylor FG, French NP.The aim of this study was to estimate the incidence of colic in horses in Thoroughbred training premises in 1997 in the British Isles. The seasonal pattern and outcome of colic episodes were also investigated, together with any association between premises level variables and colic. Data were collected by a postal questionnaire. The results showed a colic incidence density of 7.19/100 horse years (s.e. 0.42) and a cumulative incidence of colic of 5.80% (s.e. 0.30). Premises were grouped according to whether they had more Flat than National Hunt horses (Flat premises) or more National Hunt than...
Lack of antibodies to porcine circovirus type 2 virus in beef and dairy cattle and horses in western Canada.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    June 27, 2001   Volume 42, Issue 6 461-464 
Ellis JA, Konoby C, West KH, Allan GM, Krakowka S, McNeilly F, Meehan B, Walker I.Porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) is a recently recognized agent that is consistently associated with postweaning multisystemic wasting disease in swine. There are conflicting data concerning the ability of this virus to infect and cause disease in other species. To determine if normal cattle, cattle affected with various illnesses, and normal horses in endemic areas of PCV2 infection in swine have had PCV2 infections, 100 randomly selected bovine sera, 100 equine sera, and 100 colostrum samples from clinically normal dairy cattle were examined for the presence of antibodies to porcine circovir...
West Nile virus encephalomyelitis in eight horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 8, 2001   Volume 218, Issue 10 1576-1579 doi: 10.2460/javma.2001.218.1576
Snook CS, Hyman SS, Del Piero F, Palmer JE, Ostlund EN, Barr BS, Desrochers AM, Reilly LK.No abstract available
An equine mystery in the bluegrass. An epidemic is killing Kentucky’s finest foals.
U.S. news & world report    June 1, 2001   Volume 130, Issue 21 42-43 
Hayden T.No abstract available
Effects of lower doses of conjugated equine estrogens and medroxyprogesterone acetate on endometrial bleeding.
Fertility and sterility    June 1, 2001   Volume 75, Issue 6 1080-1087 doi: 10.1016/s0015-0282(01)01792-7
Archer DF, Dorin M, Lewis V, Schneider DL, Pickar JH.To evaluate vaginal bleeding profiles with lower doses of conjugated equine estrogens (CEE) and medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) as continuous combined therapy. Methods: The Women's Health, Osteoporosis, Progestin, Estrogen (Women's HOPE) study, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Methods: Study centers across the United States. Methods: Two thousand six hundred seventy-three healthy, postmenopausal women. Methods: Women received CEE, 0.625 mg/d; CEE, 0.625 mg/d, plus MPA 2.5 mg/d; CEE, 0.45 mg/d; CEE, 0.45 mg/d, plus MPA, 2.5 mg/d; CEE 0.45 mg/d, plus MPA, 1.5 mg/d; CEE, 0....
The West Nile virus: its recent emergence in North America.
Microbes and infection    May 19, 2001   Volume 3, Issue 3 223-229 doi: 10.1016/s1286-4579(01)01374-0
Garmendia AE, Van Kruiningen HJ, French RA.West Nile fever emerged in New York in the summer of 1999 when seven people, several horses and thousands of wild birds died. It was soon established that the human disease and the mortality of birds were related. Continued surveillance detected West Nile virus in mosquitoes, birds, horses, small mammals, bats and humans, and has shown its spread to several northeastern states. These events confirm the establishment of West Nile virus endemically in the United States.
Molecular surveillance of the incidence of Taylorella equigenitalis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa from horses in Ireland by sequence-specific PCR.
Equine veterinary journal    May 16, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 3 319-322 doi: 10.2746/042516401776249750
Moore JE, Buckley TC, Millar BC, Gibson P, Cannon G, Egan C, Cosgrove H, Stanbridge S, Anzai T, Matsuda M, Murphy PG.No abstract available
A long-term study of 277 cases of equine sinonasal disease. Part 2: treatments and results of treatments.
Equine veterinary journal    May 16, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 3 283-289 doi: 10.2746/042516401776249787
Tremaine WH, Dixon PM.The treatments of 277 horses with equine sinonasal disease (1984-1996), described by Tremaine and Dixon (2001), are reported here. Long-term (median duration 24 months) outcomes of treatment of the more common disorders were good, with 92% of horses with sinonasal mycosis, 84% with primary sinusitis, 82% with sinus cysts, 78% with dental sinusitis and 75% with sinonasal trauma reported to have complete remission of clinical signs. However, only 33% of horses with progressive ethmoidal haematoma (PEH) and 12% with sinonasal neoplasia reported long term remission of clinical signs.
Arbovirus surveillance in South Carolina, 1996-98.
Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association    May 10, 2001   Volume 17, Issue 1 73-78 
Wozniak A, Dowda HE, Tolson MW, Karabatsos N, Vaughan DR, Turner PE, Ortiz DI, Wills W.Arboviruses isolated and identified from mosquitoes in South Carolina (USA) are described, including new state records for eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEE), St. Louis encephalitis virus (SLE), Flanders virus, Tensaw virus (TEN), and a variant of Jamestown Canyon virus (JC). Mosquitoes were collected at 52 locations in 30 of 46 South Carolina counties beginning in June 1996, and ending in October 1998, and tested for arboviruses. Of 1,329 mosquito pools tested by virus isolation (85,806 mosquitoes representing 34 mosquito species or complexes), 15 pools were positive. Virus isolations in...
Detection of horses infected naturally with equine infectious anemia virus by nested polymerase chain reaction.
Journal of virological methods    May 5, 2001   Volume 94, Issue 1-2 97-109 doi: 10.1016/s0166-0934(01)00283-x
Nagarajan MM, Simard C.A nested polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplifying a region of the gag gene of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) was developed for the rapid and direct detection of proviral DNA from the peripheral blood of naturally infected horses and was compared with the Coggins test. DNA prepared from white blood cells of 122 field horses from 15 stables with reported cases of EIAV and one seronegative stable were analysed. Amplifications of expected size fragments were obtained by nested PCR for 88 horses using two different sets of primers targeting the gag region. The specificity of the amplified ...
FMD and horses: industry guidance for owners and event organisers.
The Veterinary record    April 21, 2001   Volume 148, Issue 10 290-291 
No abstract available
Equine infectious anemia virus genomic evolution in progressor and nonprogressor ponies.
Journal of virology    April 20, 2001   Volume 75, Issue 10 4570-4583 doi: 10.1128/JVI.75.10.4570-4583.2001
Leroux C, Craigo JK, Issel CJ, Montelaro RC.A primary mechanism of lentivirus persistence is the ability of these viruses to evolve in response to biological and immunological selective pressures with a remarkable array of genetic and antigenic variations that constitute a perpetual natural experiment in genetic engineering. A widely accepted paradigm of lentivirus evolution is that the rate of genetic variation is correlated directly with the levels of virus replication: the greater the viral replication, the more opportunities that exist for genetic modifications and selection of viral variants. To test this hypothesis directly, we ex...
Cross-sectional study of the seroprevalence to Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato and granulocytic Ehrlichia spp. and demographic, clinical and tick-exposure factors in Swedish horses.
Preventive veterinary medicine    April 20, 2001   Volume 49, Issue 3-4 191-208 doi: 10.1016/s0167-5877(01)00187-8
Egenvall A, Franzén P, Gunnarsson A, Engvall EO, Vågsholm I, Wikström UB, Artursson K.A cross-sectional study of the seroprevalence to Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato and granulocytic Ehrlichia spp. in Swedish horses was conducted to evaluate associations with demographic, clinical and tick-exposure factors. From September 1997-1998, blood samples from 2018 horses were collected from the animals presented to veterinary clinics affiliated with the Swedish Horserace Totalizator Board (regardless of the primary cause for consultation). Standardized questionnaires with information both from owners and attending veterinarians accompanied each blood sample. The apparent seroprevalenc...
Molecular epidemiology of Salmonella Heidelberg in an equine hospital.
Veterinary microbiology    March 30, 2001   Volume 80, Issue 1 85-98 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(00)00373-4
Amavisit P, Markham PF, Lightfoot D, Whithear KG, Browning GF.From 1992 to 1997, multi-drug resistant (MDR) Salmonella Heidelberg isolates were cultured from a number of horses hospitalised in a veterinary hospital in Victoria, Australia. To examine the relationships between the cases, 28 isolates from the hospital were compared by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), IS200 element profiles, antimicrobial resistance patterns, plasmid profiles and phage typing. The PFGE patterns following digestion with XbaI and BlnI restriction endonucleases showed that the isolates from the veterinary hospital originated from a common source. These isolates also had...
Antigenic variation among equine H 3 N 8 influenza virus hemagglutinins.
The Japanese journal of veterinary research    March 30, 2001   Volume 48, Issue 4 177-186 
Ozaki H, Shimizu-Nei A, Sugita S, Sugiura T, Imagawa H, Kida H.To provide information on the antigenic variation of the hemagglutinins (HA) among equine H 3 influenza viruses, 26 strains isolated from horses in different areas in the world during the 1963-1996 period were analyzed using a panel of monoclonal antibodies recognizing at least 7 distinct epitopes on the H 3 HA molecule of the prototype strain A/equine/Miami/1/63 (H 3 N 8). The reactivity patterns of the virus strains with the panel indicate that antigenic drift of the HA has occurred with the year of isolation, but less extensively than that of human H 3 N 2 influenza virus isolates, and diff...
Cross reaction of recombinant equine infectious anemia virus antigen to heterologous strains and application for serological survey among horses in the field.
Microbiology and immunology    March 29, 2001   Volume 45, Issue 1 45-50 doi: 10.1111/j.1348-0421.2001.tb01273.x
Sentsui H, Inoshima Y, Murakami K, Akashi H, Purevtseren B, Pagmajav O, Sugiura T.Cross reactivity of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV) antigen prepared using a recombinant baculovirus containing the p26 gene of strain P337-V70 was examined by the agar gel immunodiffusion (AGID) test and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Serum samples serially collected from 13 horses experimentally infected with six different EIAV strains (two or three horses per strain) were subjected to the test. Positive reactions were observed in the AGID test and ELISA before or soon after the first feverish period and continued persistently in most of the horses. The results with recombi...
Neosporosis: an emerging protozoal disease of horses.
Equine veterinary journal    March 27, 2001   Volume 33, Issue 2 116-118 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.2001.tb00588.x
Lindsay DS.No abstract available
Factors influencing the international spread of equine diseases.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    February 24, 2001   Volume 16, Issue 3 537-x doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30094-9
Timoney PJ.In an era of increasing globalization, the risk of spread of infectious diseases in humans and animals, including equids, has never been greater. International movement of equids and trade in semen are the most important factors responsible for the dissemination of various equine pathogens. Other factors that can or do have the potential to influence the global distribution of equine infectious diseases include: multinational trade agreements, emergent diseases, mutation of pathogens, climate related phenomena, migration of amplifying/reservoir hosts or vectors, availability of new vectors, va...
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