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Topic:Disease Transmission

Disease transmission in horses refers to the spread of infectious agents such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites among equine populations. These pathogens can be transmitted through various routes, including direct contact, vector-borne transmission, or environmental exposure. Factors influencing disease transmission include horse density, management practices, and biosecurity measures. Understanding the mechanisms and conditions that facilitate the spread of diseases is essential for developing effective prevention and control strategies. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the modes of transmission, risk factors, and management practices related to infectious diseases in horses.
Ecology of Rhodococcus equi in horses and their environment on horse-breeding farms.
Veterinary microbiology    August 1, 1987   Volume 14, Issue 3 233-239 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(87)90110-6
Takai S, Fujimori T, Katsuzaki K, Tsubaki S.Quantitative culture of R. equi in the feces of dams and foals, in the air of the stalls and in the soil of the paddocks was carried out on three horse-breeding farms during the foaling season. The isolation rates of R. equi from the feces of dams from the 3 farms suddenly increased to approximately 80% at the end of March, when the snow in the paddocks finished melting, and remained at that level during April and May. The mean number of R. equi and the isolation rate of R. equi from the feces of dams on the farms were investigated for 5 weeks before and 5 weeks after delivery. During the 10 w...
Racehorse treatment warning.
The Veterinary record    July 25, 1987   Volume 121, Issue 4 91 doi: 10.1136/vr.121.4.91
Foster CN.No abstract available
Laminitis and possible enterotoxaemia associated with carbohydrate overload in mares.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 4 344-346 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb01430.x
Carroll CL, Hazard G, Coloe PJ, Hooper PT.No abstract available
Status of equine viral arteritis in Kentucky, 1985.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    July 1, 1987   Volume 191, Issue 1 36-39 
Timoney PJ, McCollum WH, Roberts AW, McDonald MJ.Clinical cases of equine arteritis virus infection have not been diagnosed in Kentucky since 1984, and there has been no indication that any of the horses involved in the 1984 epizootic have since been responsible for spread of the disease to horses in other states or other countries. Cases of abortion caused by naturally acquired infection with this virus have not been confirmed in 1984 or 1985. Neither field nor vaccine strains of equine arteritis virus have been shown to induce teratologic abnormalities or the carrier state in foals born to infected or vaccinated mares. The carrier stallion...
Isolation of Cache Valley virus and detection of antibody for selected arboviruses in Michigan horses in 1980.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 7 1039-1041 
McLean RG, Calisher CH, Parham GL.Blood samples collected in September and November 1980 from 87 horses in southwestern Michigan were examined for virus isolation and for plaque-reduction neutralizing antibody against selected arboviruses. Cache Valley virus was isolated from the blood of a clinically normal horse in St Joseph County in September. The age-specific antibody prevalence for Cache Valley virus indicated enzootic transmission in the study area. The high antibody prevalence and the lack of age-specific antibody prevalence indicated sporadic, but intense, exposure to Jamestown Canyon virus. Low prevalences of antibod...
Nasogastric intubation of the horse.
The Veterinary record    June 13, 1987   Volume 120, Issue 24 584 doi: 10.1136/vr.120.24.584
Pattison IH.No abstract available
The isolation of Leptospira interrogans serovar pomona and related serological findings associated with a mixed farming unit in the Transvaal.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1987   Volume 54, Issue 2 119-121 
De Lange JF, Gummow B, Turner GV, Redman AR.This is the first known isolation in the Republic of South Africa (RSA) of the serovar pomona from the organs of porcine foetuses as well as from the renal lymph nodes of slaughter pigs showing chronic nephritis. In addition, the serovar pomona was isolated from the kidneys of 87.5% of the slaughter pigs examined. The success of these isolations was attributed in part to the refining of 2 existing isolation techniques which complement each other. Using the microscopic agglutination test, serum samples taken from the same farming unit showed evidence of antibodies to the serovar pomona in 89 ou...
Group C streptococcal arthritis. A case report of equine transmission.
Orthopedics    April 1, 1987   Volume 10, Issue 4 615-616 doi: 10.3928/0147-7447-19870401-12
Gorman PW, Collins DN.Presented is the third known case of a group C streptococcal arthritis, this case documented in a healthy 42-year-old horse trainer, apparently transmitted by a mare. After a delayed diagnosis, the patient responded favorably to surgical drainage and parenteral penicillin G, but required a manipulation of his knee under general anesthesia. Although rare, group C streptococcal arthritis can occur in hosts with no apparent predisposing factors. Frequent exposure to farm animals may increase the risk.
[Infectious course of equine herpesvirus 1 infection in a riding stable].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    March 9, 1987   Volume 94, Issue 3 149-152 
Wintzer HJ, vd Bossche G, Ludwig H, Bischof B.No abstract available
Oral transmission of eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus by a northern Indiana strain of Coquillettidia perturbans.
Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association    March 1, 1987   Volume 3, Issue 1 102-104 
Boromisa RD, Copeland RS, Grimstad PR.No abstract available
[Imported cases of melioidosis and the epidemiological surveillance of its spread].
Zhurnal mikrobiologii, epidemiologii i immunobiologii    March 1, 1987   Issue 3 93-97 
Larionov GM.No abstract available
The experimental infection of horses with Murray Valley encephalitis and Ross River viruses.
Australian veterinary journal    February 1, 1987   Volume 64, Issue 2 52-55 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1987.tb16129.x
Kay BH, Pollitt CC, Fanning ID, Hall RA.Eleven weanling horses were inoculated with Murray Valley encephalitis and Ross River viruses either by intravenous injection or by the bite of Culex annulirostris or Aedes vigilax mosquitoes infected orally. Five of the 11 horses circulated trace amounts of MVE virus for 1 to 5d and they infected 7/408 Cx annulirostris which subsequently fed on them. Haemagglutination-inhibiting antibody persisted at detectable levels for the 24-week observation period. With Ross River virus, only one of 11 horses inoculated developed a viraemia detectable by inoculation of suckling mice but 5 horses containe...
[Infectious respiratory diseases in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 2 1-56 
No abstract available
Observations on the epidemiology and control of Strongylus vulgaris infections.
Veterinary parasitology    January 1, 1987   Volume 23, Issue 1-2 69-75 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(87)90025-2
Eysker M, Wemmenhove R.The epidemiology and control of helminth infections in the horse were studied in four small grazing experiments between 1981 and 1984 at the University of Utrecht. At autopsy in November or December negligible Strongylus vulgaris burdens were found in the cranial mesenteric artery of four groups of ponies, which had been treated with an anthelmintic in July and subsequently transferred to a clean pasture. Considerable arterial S. vulgaris burdens were seen in three groups of ponies which were treated with an anthelmintic in July without a move to clean pasture, and in another group of ponies i...
The carrier state in equine arteritis virus infection in the stallion with specific emphasis on the venereal mode of virus transmission.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 35 95-102 
Timoney PJ, McCollum WH, Murphy TW, Roberts AW, Willard JG, Carswell GD.The carrier state has been confirmed virologically in Thoroughbred and non-Thoroughbred stallions naturally infected with equine arteritis virus (EAV). Short-term or convalescent and long-term carriers occur. The frequency rate of the long-term carrier state in Thoroughbreds was high, averaging 33.9% among the three groups of stallions under study. While the convalescent carrier state only lasted a few weeks after clinical recovery, the long-term carrier state could persist for years. There was evidence, however, that not all such carriers might remain persistently infected for life. Carrier s...
Serological and virological investigations of an equid herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) abortion storm on a stud farm in 1985.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1987   Volume 35 509-518 
Mumford JA, Rossdale PD, Jessett DM, Gann SJ, Ousey J, Cook RF.An extensive outbreak of EHV-1 abortions occurred on a stud farm in England in 1985. Of the 67 pregnant mares present on the stud farm, 31 were challenged with EHV-1, resulting in the loss of 22 fetuses or foals. Laboratory investigations revealed that the spread of the virus closely followed movement of apparently healthy mares (during the incubation period of the infection). During the outbreak mares were challenged 1-4 months before the expected foaling date. There was no relationship between the gestational age at the time of challenge and the subsequent outcome of infection in terms of ab...
Epidemiology of equine herpesvirus 2 (equine cytomegalovirus).
Journal of clinical microbiology    January 1, 1987   Volume 25, Issue 1 13-16 doi: 10.1128/jcm.25.1.13-16.1987
Browning GF, Studdert MJ.The epidemiology of equine herpesvirus 2 was examined by using restriction endonuclease DNA fingerprints to distinguish viruses isolated from two groups of horses. The first group consisted of three yearlings isolated from other horses but in contact with each other for 418 days, whereas the second comprised seven mares and their foals, which were sampled at monthly intervals from parturition until the foals were about 180 days old. There was a complex pattern of transmission, with 15 different viruses isolated from both groups. Four distinguishable viruses were isolated from the three yearlin...
Epizootic vesicular stomatitis in Colorado, 1982: infection in occupational risk groups.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    January 1, 1987   Volume 36, Issue 1 177-182 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1987.36.177
Reif JS, Webb PA, Monath TP, Emerson JK, Poland JD, Kemp GE, Cholas G.In 1982-1983, an epizootic of vesicular stomatitis occurred in the western United States. Veterinarians, research workers, and regulatory personnel who were exposed to vesicular stomatitis virus were examined for patterns of human infection and prevalence of vesicular stomatitis New Jersey serotype neutralizing antibody. Insight into the mechanism of transmission was sought by comparing activities of antibody-positive and antibody-negative persons. A statistically significant risk factor was a history of infected animals sneezing in the face of serosurvey participants. Elevated odds ratios wer...
Attempted transmission of Ehrlichia risticii by field-captured Dermacentor variabilis (Acari: Ixodidae).
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1986   Volume 47, Issue 11 2393-2395 
Schmidtmann ET, Robl MG, Carroll JF.The capability of field-collected American dog ticks, Dermacentor variabilis, to infect horses with Ehrlichia risticii, causative agent of Potomac horse fever (PHF), was examined by allowing adult ticks collected from horse farms with a history of PHF to feed on susceptible horses. More than 500 male and female ticks attached and fed on 3 test horses; however, no clinical or serologic evidence of PHF was observed in treated or control horses. All horses were challenge exposed with E risticii-infective blood by inoculation at 60 to 65 days after ticks fed, and all developed clinical PHF with su...
Epidemiology and control of equine strongylosis at Newmarket.
Equine veterinary journal    November 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 6 447-452 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03684.x
Herd RP.Seasonal rises in mean faecal egg output were observed in grazing ponies in spring (578 eggs per gram) and in summer (930 epg) on 30 April and 2 September, respectively, in untreated ponies. Pasture infectivity reached a peak of 18,486 third stage larvae (L3)/kg on 17 September, two weeks after peak egg counts, coincidental with abundant September rainfall (103.0 mm). Differentiation of infective larvae from pasture showed the cyathostomes (small strongyles) to be predominant, but Trichostrongylus axei assumed major importance from late August to October. The large strongyles were rarely detec...
Treating the periurban horse.
The Veterinary record    October 25, 1986   Volume 119, Issue 17 434-435 doi: 10.1136/vr.119.17.434
No abstract available
Cutaneous leishmaniasis is frequent in equines from an endemic area in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Memorias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz    October 1, 1986   Volume 81, Issue 4 471-472 doi: 10.1590/s0074-02761986000400015
Aguilar CM, Rangel EF, Deane LM.In an endemic area of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Rio de Janeiro State where a mule had been found infected, a systematic search among equines was performed, resulting in the detection of Leishmania parasites in skin lesions of 30.8% of the animals, which included horses and mules. The eventual role of equines in the epidemiology of the human disease is being investigated.
Transmissibility and abortogenic effect of equine viral arteritis in mares.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    October 1, 1986   Volume 189, Issue 7 769-771 
Cole JR, Hall RF, Gosser HS, Hendricks JB, Pursell AR, Senne DA, Pearson JE, Gipson CA.A group of 14 pregnant mares was exposed via contact to 4 mares bred to stallions infected with equine viral arteritis virus. There was a demonstrable febrile response in each donor mare and in 12 of the pregnant mares. All 18 mares became seropositive after exposure. Equine viral arteritis virus was isolated from the nasopharynx of 5 pregnant mares, but not from the donor mares. Ten of the pregnant mares aborted, and virus was isolated from fetal specimens or placenta of 8.
Tying up the loose ends of equine rhabdomyolysis.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 5 346-348 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03650.x
Harris P, Snow DH.No abstract available
Preliminary characterisation of torovirus-like particles of humans: comparison with Berne virus of horses and Breda virus of calves.
Journal of medical virology    September 1, 1986   Volume 20, Issue 1 67-78 doi: 10.1002/jmv.1890200109
Beards GM, Brown DW, Green J, Flewett TH.Pleomorphic virus-like particles have been observed by electron microscopy in the faeces of children and adults with diarrhoea. Some of these particles were approximately 100 nm in diameter and had a "fringe" of closely applied peplomers approximately 10 nm long; they closely resembled Berne virus of horses and Breda virus of calves, the two representatives of a newly proposed family called the Toroviridae. In one sample a toroidal nucleoprotein-like structure was observed within the particles. For two samples a buoyant density of 1.14 g/ml was determined by centrifugation through a sucrose de...
Demonstration of the carrier state in naturally acquired equine arteritis virus infection in the stallion.
Research in veterinary science    September 1, 1986   Volume 41, Issue 2 279-280 
Timoney PJ, McCollum WH, Roberts AW, Murphy TW.The chronic carrier state was virologically confirmed in 15 thoroughbred stallions naturally infected with equine arteritis virus based on the results of test matings and, or, isolations of the virus from semen. Carrier stallions were shown to shed equine arteritis virus in the semen for at least one to two years. Existence of a short-term or convalescent carrier state was also demonstrated in five additional stallions. The frequency of the long-term carrier state in stallions naturally infected with equine arteritis virus was 35 per cent; it varied considerably between groups of stallions on ...
Parasitology.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1986   Volume 2, Issue 2 263-459 
No abstract available
Ecology of Rhodococcus (Corynebacterium) equi in soil on a horse-breeding farm.
Veterinary microbiology    July 1, 1986   Volume 12, Issue 2 169-177 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(86)90078-7
Takai S, Narita K, Ando K, Tsubaki S.The ecology of Rhodococcus (Corynebacterium) equi in soil was studied on a horse-breeding farm. R. equi was cultured from soil at a depth of 0, 10, and 20 cm on the six sites of the farm at monthly intervals for 10 months from March to December of 1983. The highest numbers of R. equi were found in the surface soil. The mean number of bacteria in soil samples at every depth increased remarkably from 0 or 10(2) to 10(4) colony-forming units (CFU) g-1 of soil in the middle of April, and later decreased gradually. R. equi inoculated into six soil exudate broths prepared from surface soils at separ...
Trypanosomiasis in Indonesia. A review of research, 1900-1983.
The veterinary quarterly    July 1, 1986   Volume 8, Issue 3 250-256 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1986.9694049
Dieleman EF.This review describes research conducted from 1900-1983 on trypanosomiasis due to Trypanosoma evansi in Indonesia. Clinical signs and post-mortem findings in horses, cattle, buffaloes, pigs and dogs, experimental transmission tests to establish possible surra vectors in Indonesia, and research on chemotherapy and chemoprophylaxis are discussed.
Role of Culex pipiens L. in recovering latent African-horse-sickness virus from dogs.
Journal of the Egyptian Society of Parasitology    June 1, 1986   Volume 16, Issue 1 249-258 
el-Husseini MM, Salama SA, Abdallah SK, Abou Bakr HE, Hassanein MM.No abstract available
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