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Topic:Epidemiology

Epidemiology in horses involves the study of the distribution and determinants of health-related states and events in equine populations. It encompasses the investigation of patterns, causes, and effects of diseases and health conditions within horse populations. This field of study aims to identify risk factors for disease and targets for preventive healthcare. Key components of equine epidemiology include disease surveillance, outbreak investigation, and the study of disease dynamics within herds or regions. Research in this area often focuses on infectious diseases, zoonotic diseases, and the impact of environmental factors on equine health. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore various aspects of epidemiology in horses, including disease prevalence, transmission pathways, and strategies for disease prevention and control.
Distribution of leucocyte antigens in Icelandic horses affected with summer eczema compared to non-affected horses.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 4 300-302 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03722.x
Halldórsdóttir S, Lazary S, Gunnarsson E, Larsen HJ.Three hundred and three horses, exported from Iceland to Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Switzerland or Germany were tested for their distribution of leucocyte antigens. One hundred and thirty-six horses were affected with summer eczema. The panel of sera recognised the internationally accepted ELA-specificities A 1 to A10, and the nine work shop specificities W 11 to W 15 and W 18 to W 21. Also, some local specificities, characterised in Switzerland (Be I, Be III, Be 8, Be 25, Be 26, Be 27), and two non major histocompatibility complex (MHC)-linked antigens (Ely 1:1, Ely 2) were included. Only one a...
Fumonisin B1 concentrations in feeds from 45 confirmed equine leukoencephalomalacia cases. Ross PF, Rice LG, Reagor JC, Osweiler GD, Wilson TM, Nelson HA, Owens DL, Plattner RD, Harlin KA, Richard JL.During the fall of 1989 and winter of 1990, numerous reports of equine leukoencephalomalacia (ELEM) occurred from many regions of the United States. Typically, horses were consuming feed partially or entirely composed of corn and/or corn screenings. From October 1989 through May 1990, samples from 55 confirmed or suspected ELEM cases were received at the National Veterinary Services Laboratories, Ames, Iowa, for fumonisin B1 analysis. Samples from 9 cases in 1984-1985 were also obtained. Fumonisin B1, a mycotoxin produced by Fusarium moniliforme, causes ELEM, but little is known of naturally o...
Detection of Babesia equi in infected horses and carrier animals using a DNA probe.
Veterinary parasitology    July 1, 1991   Volume 39, Issue 1-2 19-32 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(91)90058-4
Posnett ES, Fehrsen J, De Waal DT, Ambrosio RE.The ability of the Babesia equi repetitive probes, pSE2 and pSB20, to detect parasites in blood from experimentally infected, naturally infected and carrier animals was tested using a spot hybridization assay. The clinical course of the experimentally infected horses was monitored using microscopy, indirect fluorescent antibody tests, packed cell volume, temperature and the probe assay. The probes sensitively monitored the parasite level during the development of the disease and correlated well with the other parameters tested. The sensitivity of the probe assay was superior to that of light m...
Prevalence of serum precipitating antibodies in horses to fungal and thermophilic actinomycete antigens: effects of environmental challenge.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 4 247-252 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb03711.x
Madelin TM, Clarke AF, Mair TS.Sera from 54 two- to three-year-old Thoroughbred horses from an English racing stable were examined for precipitins to antigen extracts prepared from 18 species of moulds (fungi and thermophilic actinomycetes) isolated from the same stable. Twenty-seven horses exhibited serum precipitins to one or more antigens; sixteen of the mould antigens elicited positive reactions in sera from one or more horses. Significantly more precipitins occurred in sera of those horses stabled in a barn than among those stabled in individual boxes. This indicated a possible association between type of housing, leve...
Thoracic radiographic features of silicosis in 19 horses.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    July 1, 1991   Volume 5, Issue 4 248-256 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1991.tb00956.x
Berry CR, O'Brien TR, Madigan JE, Hager DA.Clinical records and thoracic radiographs of 19 horses with a confirmed pathologic diagnosis of silicosis were reviewed. These horses had histories of varying degrees of chronic weight loss, exercise intolerance, and respiratory distress. At the time of presentation, two horses were asymptomatic. Ten horses were geldings and nine were female. The mean age of the 19 horses was 10.7 +/- 5.5 years. Fourteen horses were identified as being from the Monterey-Carmel Peninsula of midcoastal California. An abnormal, structured interstitial pulmonary pattern was identified on thoracic radiographs in ea...
An outbreak of equine neonatal salmonellosis. Walker RL, Madigan JE, Hird DW, Case JT, Villanueva MR, Bogenrief DS.An outbreak of salmonellosis in foals occurred on a large Thoroughbred farm in California. Only foals less than 8 days of age exhibited clinical signs, which included depression, anorexia, and diarrhea. Three foals died from septicemia. The agent responsible was Salmonella ohio, which is rarely involved in salmonellosis in horses. During the course of the outbreak, S. ohio was isolated from 27 of 97 mares (27.8%) and 34 of 97 foals (35.1%). Mares were the presumed source of infection for foals. The absence of clinical signs in mares allowed for increased exposure of foals through environmental...
The equine rhabdomyolysis syndrome in the United Kingdom: epidemiological and clinical descriptive information.
The British veterinary journal    July 1, 1991   Volume 147, Issue 4 373-384 doi: 10.1016/0007-1935(91)90011-B
Harris PA.The paper provides some basic epidemiological and clinical descriptive information for the equine rhabdomyolysis syndrome (ERS) in the United Kingdom. Information was obtained retrospectively from laboratory submission data as well as cases investigated by the author via their veterinary surgeon. Sex appeared to be a significant variable, with females being more likely than males to suffer from ERS compared to other conditions (P less than 0.01). More samples were submitted in the period November-February than at other times of the year (P less than 0.01). The condition appeared to be found in...
Maternal antibodies against equine influenza virus in foals and their interference with vaccination.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    July 1, 1991   Volume 38, Issue 5 391-396 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1991.tb00887.x
Van Oirschot JT, Bruin G, de Boer-Luytze E, Smolders G.Foals that were born to mares vaccinated twice a year against influenza had moderate to high haemagglutination-inhibition antibody titers at 24 hours after birth. The foals were vaccinated at six and ten weeks of age, and again at three to five months after birth. Four months after the third vaccination no antibodies against A/H7N7 and A/H3N8 influenza viruses were detected in these foals. Thus, maternal antibodies probably prevented the development of antibodies against equine influenza virus after vaccination. Foals born to the same mares one year later were monitored to determine the rate o...
New influenza virus in horses.
Nature    June 13, 1991   Volume 351, Issue 6327 527 doi: 10.1038/351527a0
Webster RG, Guo YJ.No abstract available
[Detection of bovine papillomavirus DNA in equine sarcoids using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR)].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    June 1, 1991   Volume 104, Issue 6 185-187 
Teifke JP, Weiss E.Unfixed and formalin-fixed frozen sections and paraffin-sections of histopathologically confirmed sarcoids of 20 horses were studied in the PCR. The used set of primers was located in the E5 open reading frame fitting both to bovine papillomavirus 1 (BPV-1) and BPV-2. Independent of the quality of the used tissues BPV-DNA was detected in all 20 sarcoids. By cleaving with restriction endonuclease Bst XI it was shown that the DNA-sequences amplified by PCR were identical with that of BPV-1. The results support the general view that BPV play an important role in equine sarcoids.
DNA probes for the detection of Babesia caballi.
Parasitology    June 1, 1991   Volume 102 Pt 3 357-365 doi: 10.1017/s0031182000064301
Posnett ES, Ambrosio RE.A genomic library of Babesia caballi DNA was constructed in the plasmid vector pUC13. The specificity of the clones for B. caballi was established by the lack of hybridization to Babesia equi, Babesia bovis, Babesia bigemina and equine DNA. Two probes, pBC11 and pBC191, were isolated that could detect 0.25 ng and 0.125 ng of B. caballi DNA, corresponding to a parasitaemia of 0.12% and 0.06% respectively. pBC191 could detect B. caballi parasites in the blood of an experimentally infected horse as well as in naturally infected horses.
Molluscum contagiosum in three horses.
Journal of the South African Veterinary Association    June 1, 1991   Volume 62, Issue 2 68-71 
Lange L, Marett S, Maree C, Gerdes T.Suspected molluscum contagiosum was diagnosed in 3 horses in the Chingola district of Zambia. The horses were found to be suffering from a slow progressive skin disease with lesions on the chest, shoulders, inner and lateral aspects of the fore- and hindlimbs, the face, fetlocks, pasterns and on the lateral surfaces of the body. The lesions varied from 4 to 20mm in diameter, were hairless but covered by soft keratin projections which, when removed, left a raw elevated base tightly adherent to the epidermis. These lesions bled profusely when the animals were groomed. Older lesions were well cir...
Hazards of horse-riding as a popular sport.
British journal of sports medicine    June 1, 1991   Volume 25, Issue 2 105-110 doi: 10.1136/bjsm.25.2.105
Silver JR, Parry JM.The increasing incidence of horse-riding accidents, which are often severe in nature, prompted a pilot study of a questionnaire designed to elucidate the cause of such accidents. It was hoped that, on a larger scale, the information gleaned would highlight possible preventative measures which might improve the safety of an important recreational pursuit enjoyed by young and old from many walks of life. A retrospective study of riders sustaining serious spinal injuries admitted to Stoke Mandeville Hospital was compared with riders sustaining minor but significant injuries as the accidents came ...
Concentrations of fumonisin B1 in feeds associated with animal health problems.
Mycopathologia    June 1, 1991   Volume 114, Issue 3 129-135 doi: 10.1007/BF00437200
Ross PF, Rice LG, Plattner RD, Osweiler GD, Wilson TM, Owens DL, Nelson HA, Richard JL.Ninety-eight samples of feeds associated with 44 cases of equine leukoencephalomalacia (ELEM) and 83 samples of feed associated with 42 cases of a porcine pulmonary edema syndrome (PPE) were analyzed for fumonisin B1 (FB1). For comparison purposes, 51 feed samples not associated with PPE or ELEM were also analyzed. Feed associated with ELEM contained FB1 ranging from less than 1 microgram/g to 126 micrograms/g with 75% of the cases having at least 1 sample above 10 micrograms/g. Feeds associated with PPE ranged from less than 1 microgram/g to 330 micrograms/g with 71% of the cases having at le...
Serially determined plasma alpha-tocopherol concentrations and results of the oral vitamin E absorption test in clinically normal horses and in horses with degenerative myeloencephalopathy.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1991   Volume 52, Issue 6 908-911 
Blythe LL, Craig AM, Lassen ED, Rowe KE, Appell LH.Plasma alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E) values were monitored serially in 9 foals sired by a stallion with equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy (EDM) and in 5 age-matched control foals (sired by a clinically normal stallion) raised in the same environment for the first year of life. Clinical evaluation determined that 8 of the 9 foals sired by the stallion with EDM had neurologic deficits consistent with the disease on one or more occasions during the study period, whereas control foals had normal gait. From 6 weeks to 10 months of age, plasma alpha-tocopherol values in foals with signs of EDM ...
Failure of passive transfer of colostral immunity in the foal: incidence, and the effect of stud management and plasma transfusions.
The Veterinary record    May 4, 1991   Volume 128, Issue 18 416-419 doi: 10.1136/vr.128.18.416
Stoneham SJ, Digby NJ, Ricketts SW.The importance of colostrum for the passive transfer of maternal immunity to foals is well recognised. This survey reports the incidence of the failure of passive transfer of colostral immunity in thoroughbred foals in the United Kingdom during 1988 to 1990, and the effect of plasma transfusions on IgG levels in a group of them. The incidence of disease in these foals first month of life is also recorded.
Arteritis in equine fetuses aborted due to equine viral arteritis.
Veterinary pathology    May 1, 1991   Volume 28, Issue 3 248-250 doi: 10.1177/030098589102800310
Johnson B, Baldwin C, Timoney P, Ely R.No abstract available
Preliminary observations on an alternative strategy for the control of horse strongyles.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 3 226-228 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb02762.x
Duncan JL, Love S.No abstract available
Amplification and differentiation of the DNA of an abortigenic (type 1) and a respiratory (type 4) strain of equine herpesvirus by the polymerase chain reaction.
Research in veterinary science    May 1, 1991   Volume 50, Issue 3 349-351 doi: 10.1016/0034-5288(91)90137-d
O'Keefe JS, Murray A, Wilks CR, Moriarty KM.Unpurified DNA derived from cultures of equine fetal kidney cells infected with either equine herpesvirus type 1 or equine herpesvirus type 4 was amplified by the polymerase chain reaction using one pair of oligonucleotide primers. Restriction endonuclease digestion of the amplified segments with PvuII, followed by electrophoresis, revealed restriction fragment length polymorphisms which enabled the two virus types to be differentiated.
Analysis of serotypes and electropherotypes of equine rotaviruses isolated in the United States.
Journal of clinical microbiology    May 1, 1991   Volume 29, Issue 5 889-893 doi: 10.1128/jcm.29.5.889-893.1991
Hardy ME, Woode GN, Xu ZC, Williams JD, Conner ME, Dwyer RM, Powell DG.Equine group A rotaviruses isolated over a 10-year period in New York State, New Jersey, Kentucky, and Texas were compared serotypically and electropherotypically. All isolates were determined to be serotype 3 by reaction with hyperimmune antiserum to the serotype 3 H-2 strain of equine rotavirus. All displayed RNA electrophoretic migration patterns related to that of the H-2 strain but distinct from that of serotype 5 strain H-1. A serologic survey of 184 mares in Kentucky, which was done to determine the incidence of H-1 and H-2 infections, showed geometric mean serum neutralizing titers to ...
Relative incidence of dorsal metacarpal disease in young Thoroughbred racehorses training on two different surfaces.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1991   Volume 23, Issue 3 166-168 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1991.tb02748.x
Moyer W, Spencer PA, Kallish M.The relative incidence of dorsal metacarpal disease was examined in two groups of Thoroughbred racehorses training on dissimilar surfaces (dirt and wood fibre). The horses and training methods appeared to be similar. The incidence of disease was significantly greater in the group training on dirt. There was no significant difference in the age distribution of incidence between the two groups and there was no association of incidence with sex or age within the training group. The number of fast miles worked by the two groups prior to the onset of dorsal metacarpal disease was lower in the group...
Serological and genomic characterization of L338, a novel equine group A rotavirus G serotype.
The Journal of general virology    May 1, 1991   Volume 72 ( Pt 5) 1059-1064 doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-72-5-1059
Browning GF, Chalmers RM, Fitzgerald TA, Snodgrass DR.A group A rotavirus designated L338 was isolated from the faeces of a diarrhoeic foal and was compared to 11 standard G serotype strains of group A rotaviruses by cross-neutralization. It was clearly distinct from serotypes G1 to G11 and thus representative of a novel rotavirus G serotype tentatively designated G13. The nucleic acid sequence of the virion protein 7 (VP7) coding region was determined and the deduced amino acid sequence compared to published sequences. Within VP7 regions A and B, L338 was clearly distinct from serotypes G1 to G12 (excluding G7 which has not been sequenced), but ...
[Possibilities and limits of immunodiagnosis of strongyle infections in horses].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    May 1, 1991   Volume 104, Issue 5 149-153 
Weiland G, Hasslinger MA, Mezger S, Pöllein W.In an investigation period over 8 months the natural course of infection was studied by means of coproscopic and serological methods in 27 mares and 29 foals. The examination of the stool showed in mares, before the beginning of the grazing season, an infection rate of 100% with small and a rate of 7.4% with large strongyles (Str. vulgaris). Serologically the ELISA showed in foals only a distinct increase of antibody activity with the somatic antigen. The mares retained the high IgG-values of activity, which were already found at the beginning of the investigations. Even though the agglutinati...
The microflora of the lower respiratory tract of the horse: an autopsy study.
The British veterinary journal    May 1, 1991   Volume 147, Issue 3 238-250 doi: 10.1016/0007-1935(91)90048-R
Blunden AS, Mackintosh ME.A series of 31 thoroughbreds and 18 non-thoroughbreds was examined post mortem to assess what bacteria might be present in the lower respiratory tract, and to assess their significance by correlating the bacteriological findings with histological changes in the lung. The distal trachea and seven representative lung sites were swabbed in each case. Sixty-six per cent of the sites were sterile with remaining sites producing scanty growths of mainly coagulase negative Staphylococcus spp., E. coli, Bacillus spp. and Pseudomonas spp. Anaerobes, mainly Clostridium perfringens, Bacteroides fragilis a...
[The differentiation of viruses in the Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis complex by using monoclonal antibodies and lanthanide immunofluorescence analysis].
Voprosy virusologii    May 1, 1991   Volume 36, Issue 3 226-229 
Gaĭdamovich SIa, Pomelova VG, Lavrova NA, Mel'nikova EE, Sokolova MV, Kharitonenkov IG, Zlobin VN.Potentialities of differentiation between Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis (VEE) complex viruses by time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay and enzyme immunoassay were studied. For this, 4 test systems were used based on different combinations of native and labeled polyclonal antibodies to VEE virus, strain Trinidad, and monoclonal (MCA) antibody MAK 14-7 to protein EL of this virus. The maximal sensitivity and specificity was achieved in the test system formed from native MCA MAK 14-7 for sensitization of the solid phase and labeled polyclonal immunoglobulins for demonstration of the test results....
Epidemiologic importance of interstate transport of equids infected with equine infectious anemia virus.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 15, 1991   Volume 198, Issue 8 1332-1333 
Campbell CT, Nusbaum SR.No abstract available
A suspected case of grass sickness in the Falkland Islands.
The Veterinary record    April 13, 1991   Volume 128, Issue 15 359-360 doi: 10.1136/vr.128.15.359
Woods JA, Gilmour JS.No abstract available
Diagnosis and prevalence of leptospira infection in aborted and stillborn horses. Donahue JM, Smith BJ, Redmon KJ, Donahue JK.A study was conducted to evaluate a recently available fluorescent antibody test (FAT) conjugate for the detection of leptospires in tissues of aborted and stillborn horses, to determine the leptospira antibody titers and compare serologic test results with FAT results, and to determine the prevalence of leptospira-induced abortions and stillbirths in the equine population of central Kentucky. From July 1, 1988 through June 30, 1989, 15 (2.5%) of 594 submissions (fetuses, stillborn foals, and/or placentas) were diagnosed as leptospirosis by the FAT (14 of 15 tested) and/or microscopic agglutin...
Verminous mastitis in a mare caused by a free-living nematode.
The Journal of parasitology    April 1, 1991   Volume 77, Issue 2 320-322 
Greiner EC, Mays MB, Smart GC, Weisbrode SE.Verminous mastitis was the reason for euthanasia of a 22-yr-old Paso Fino mare from Miami, Florida. The etiologic agent was a species of Cephalobus (Rhabditida: Cephalobidae), a genus of soil-inhabiting nematodes that were obviously multiplying in the mammary gland. Only females and larvae were detected in the tissues by histologic section or by teasing the tissue to liberate the worms. At least 12,900 individuals were present per gram of tissue. This is the first case of Cephalobus infecting horses and it indicates that not all histiotropic infections of horses by rhabditoid nematodes are by ...
Fumonisin mycotoxins and equine leukoencephalomalacia.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 1, 1991   Volume 198, Issue 7 1104-1105 
Wilson TM, Ross PF, Nelson PE.No abstract available