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Topic:Infectious Disease

Infectious diseases in horses encompass a range of illnesses caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi, or parasites. These diseases can affect various systems within the equine body, leading to symptoms that range from mild discomfort to severe systemic illness. Common infectious diseases in horses include equine influenza, strangles, equine herpesvirus, and West Nile virus. These diseases can be transmitted through direct contact with infected animals, contaminated surfaces, or vectors such as insects. Understanding the mechanisms of transmission, pathogenesis, and immune response is essential for effective prevention and control. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment, and management of infectious diseases in horses.
Use of an internal standard in a closed one-tube RT-PCR for the detection of equine arteritis virus RNA with fluorescent probes.
Veterinary research    March 27, 2003   Volume 34, Issue 2 165-176 doi: 10.1051/vetres:2002063
Westcott DG, King DP, Drew TW, Nowotny N, Kindermann J, Hannant D, Belák S, Paton DJ.Routine detection of equine arteritis virus (EAV) can be achieved by virus isolation (VI) in cell culture, or by the amplification of viral genome by molecular methods. To simplify molecular diagnosis, a number of different Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction (RT-PCR) and RT-nested PCR (RT-nPCR) assays were compared, and a one-tube method was developed and optimised utilizing a fluorogenic probe (TaqMan). An artificial RNA template (Mimic) and associated probe were also constructed to provide in-tube validation of the RT-PCR system. To assess the utility of the RT-PCR TaqMan assay,...
Characterization of enzootic foci of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus in western Venezuela.
Vector borne and zoonotic diseases (Larchmont, N.Y.)    March 26, 2003   Volume 1, Issue 3 219-230 doi: 10.1089/153036601753552585
Barrera R, Torres N, Freier JE, Navarro JC, García CZ, Salas R, Vasquez C, Weaver SC.The distribution of the sylvatic subtype ID Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) viruses in the lowland tropical forests of western Venezuela was investigated using remote sensing and geographic information system technologies. Landsat 5 Thematic Mapper satellite imagery was used to study the reflectance patterns of VEE endemic foci and to identify other locations with similar reflectance patterns. Enzootic VEE virus variants isolated during this study are the closest genetic relatives of the epizootic viruses that emerged in western Venezuela during 1992-1993. VEE virus surveillance was condu...
A recombinant envelope protein-based enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for West Nile virus serodiagnosis.
Vector borne and zoonotic diseases (Larchmont, N.Y.)    March 26, 2003   Volume 2, Issue 2 105-109 doi: 10.1089/153036602321131904
Wang T, Magnarelli LA, Anderson JF, Gould LH, Bushmich SL, Wong SJ, Fikrig E.Recombinant West Nile virus envelope (E) protein was examined in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to detect antibodies elicited during West Nile virus infection. Horses (nine of 10) and humans (six of six) with confirmed West Nile virus infection had IgG and/or IgM antibodies to the E protein. Antibodies to the recombinant West Nile virus membrane and nonstructural 1 proteins were not detected in any of these sera. An E protein-based ELISA may aid in the serological diagnosis of West Nile virus infection.
Equine immune-mediated hemolytic anemia associated with Clostridium perfringens infection.
Veterinary clinical pathology    March 26, 2003   Volume 32, Issue 1 22-26 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-165x.2003.tb00308.x
Weiss DJ, Moritz A.Previous studies have suggested an association between equine immune-mediated hemolytic anemia and clostridial infections or neck abscesses. Objective: The purpose of this report was to describe and characterize the hematologic abnormalities in a horse with Clostridium-associated immune-mediated hemolytic anemia. We also retrospectively evaluated hematologic abnormalities in 8 horses with clostridial myositis or subcutaneous emphysema. Methods: A 7-year-old Foreign Warm-Blood gelding was evaluated for anemia and a cervical abscess. CBCs and reticulocyte counts were obtained using an Advia 120 ...
Limited potential for mosquito transmission of genetically engineered, live-attenuated western equine encephalitis virus vaccine candidates.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    March 19, 2003   Volume 68, Issue 2 218-221 
Turell MJ, O'Guinn ML, Parker MD.Specific mutations associated with attenuation of Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) virus in rodent models were identified during efforts to develop an improved VEE vaccine. Analogous mutations were produced in full-length cDNA clones of the Cba 87 strain of western equine encephalitis (WEE) virus by site-directed mutagenesis in an attempt to develop an improved WEE vaccine. Isogenic viral strains with these mutations were recovered after transfection of baby hamster kidney cells with infectious RNA. We evaluated two of these strains (WE2102 and WE2130) for their ability to replicate in and...
Strangles, bastard strangles, vives and glanders: archaeological relics in a genomic age.
Equine veterinary journal    March 18, 2003   Volume 35, Issue 2 118-120 doi: 10.2746/042516403776114252
Slater JD.No abstract available
Brain abscesses as a metastatic manifestation of strangles: symptomatology and the use of magnetic resonance imaging as a diagnostic aid.
Equine veterinary journal    March 18, 2003   Volume 35, Issue 2 146-151 doi: 10.2746/042516403776114153
Spoormakers TJ, Ensink JM, Goehring LS, Koeman JP, Ter Braake F, van der Vlugt-Meijer RH, van den Belt AJ.The occurrence of unexpectedly high numbers of horses with neurological signs during two outbreaks of strangles required prompt in-depth researching of these cases, including the exploration of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) as a possible diagnostic technique. Objective: To describe the case series and assess the usefulness of MRI as an imaging modality for cases suspected of space-occupying lesions in the cerebral cavity. Methods: Four cases suspected of suffering from cerebral damage due to Streptococcus equi subsp. equi infection were examined clinically, pathologically, bacteriologically...
Ameloblastic carcinoma in a horse.
Journal of comparative pathology    March 14, 2003   Volume 128, Issue 2-3 210-215 doi: 10.1053/jcpa.2002.0623
De Cock HE, Labelle P, Magdesian KG.The clinical, gross morphological, histological and immunohistochemical characteristics of an ameloblastic carcinoma in a 30-year-old Quarter Horse mare are reported. This tumour was fast growing, locally invasive and destructive. Histologically, it showed an infiltrative pattern of large islands, broad sheets and, at the periphery, small cords of moderately pleomorphic round, oval to spindle-shaped cells. Immunohistochemical evaluation revealed positive labelling for vimentin, cytokeratin 5/6 and cytokeratin 14. In the oral cavity of human beings, this immunolabelling pattern is unique for th...
Temporal changes in cytokine expression of foals during the first month of life.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    March 12, 2003   Volume 92, Issue 1-2 75-85 doi: 10.1016/s0165-2427(03)00021-7
Boyd NK, Cohen ND, Lim WS, Martens RJ, Chaffin MK, Ball JM.Foals are uniquely susceptible to a wide variety of opportunistic infections normally associated with immunodeficiencies. Little is understood about the immune system of foals during the neonatal period. An apparent age-related susceptibility predisposes neonatal foals to infectious diseases and hinders therapeutic and preventative interventions for these diseases. Cytokine expression is correlated with the type of immune response as well as the severity of a disease. In this study, we measured foal peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC)-specific mRNA cytokine expression from 72 foals from t...
Performance of five serological assays for diagnosis of Rhodococcus equi pneumonia in foals.
Clinical and diagnostic laboratory immunology    March 11, 2003   Volume 10, Issue 2 241-245 doi: 10.1128/cdli.10.2.241-245.2003
Giguère S, Hernandez J, Gaskin J, Prescott JF, Takai S, Miller C.The performance of four enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) (ELISA-6939, ELISA-33701, ELISA-VapA, and ELISA-California) and an agar gel immunodiffusion test for diagnosis of Rhodococcus equi pneumonia in foals was evaluated. Antibody concentrations of foals with culture-confirmed R. equi pneumonia (n = 41) were compared to those of age-matched pasturemates that remained clinically healthy during the entire breeding season (n = 24). For each serological assay evaluated, selection of a low cutoff resulted in high sensitivity but low specificity. Increasing the cutoff value resulted in be...
Percutaneous puncture technique for treating persistent retropharyngeal lymph node infections in seven horses.
The Veterinary record    March 8, 2003   Volume 152, Issue 6 169-172 doi: 10.1136/vr.152.6.169
De Clercq D, van Loon G, Nollet H, Delesalle C, Lefère L, Deprez P.Between 1999 and 2001, seven horses with fever, dysphagia and a history of chronic upper respiratory tract infection lasting between three weeks and three months were examined. They had been treated unsuccessfully with a variety of antibiotics for three to four weeks. A deep abscess in a retropharyngeal lymph node was diagnosed in each case by clinical examination, endoscopy and echographic examination of the retropharyngeal region. The infected retropharyngeal lymph node of each horse was punctured with a spinal needle under ultrasound guidance. Pus was aspirated from four of the horses, and ...
High-level expression and purification of a truncated merozoite antigen-2 of Babesia equi in Escherichia coli and its potential for immunodiagnosis.
Journal of clinical microbiology    March 8, 2003   Volume 41, Issue 3 1147-1151 doi: 10.1128/JCM.41.3.1147-1151.2003
Huang X, Xuan X, Yokoyama N, Xu L, Suzuki H, Sugimoto C, Nagasawa H, Fujisaki K, Igarashi I.The gene encoding a truncated merozoite antigen-2 (EMA-2t) of Babesia equi was cloned and highly expressed in Escherichia coli as a glutathione S-transferase fusion protein (G-rEMA-2t). Both G-rEMA-2t and rEMA-2t (after the removal of glutathione S-transferase) had good antigenicity. Either Western blot analysis with rEMA-2t or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) with G-rEMA-2t clearly discriminated the sera of horses experimentally infected with B. equi from sera of horses infected with Babesia caballi and healthy horses, although rEMA-2t was not suitable for ELISA, probably owing to it...
The Australian paralysis tick may be the missing link in the transmission of Hendra virus from bats to horses to humans.
Medical hypotheses    March 5, 2003   Volume 60, Issue 4 481-483 doi: 10.1016/s0306-9877(02)00377-8
Barker SC.Hendra virus is a new virus of the family Paramyxoviridae. This virus was first detected in Queensland, Australia, in 1994; although, it seems that the virus has infected fruit-eating bats (flying-foxes) for a very long time. At least 2 humans and 15 horses have been killed by this virus since it first emerged as a virus that may infect mammals other than flying-foxes. Hendra virus is thought to have moved from flying-foxes to horses, and then from horses to people. There is a reasonably strong hypothesis for horse-to-human transmission: transmission of virus via nasal discharge, saliva and/or...
[Rayer’s studies on the contagion of glanders (1837-1843)].
Histoire des sciences medicales    February 28, 2003   Volume 36, Issue 4 389-408 
Richet G.P. Rayer (1795-1867) had never thoroughly published his experimental studies on the contagion of glanders. His recently un-earthed hand written papers allow us to depict his experimental approach and its results. He was not the first who transmitted glanders from a patient to horses or donkeys. But he did it systematically with glander secretions from acute and chronic cases. Whatever was the disease of the donors the transmitted forms were unpredictably either chronic or acute. His conclusion was that the two forms were two symptomatic aspects of a unique disease. Clinically dormant states we...
Equine amplification and virulence of subtype IE Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses isolated during the 1993 and 1996 Mexican epizootics.
Emerging infectious diseases    February 27, 2003   Volume 9, Issue 2 161-168 doi: 10.3201/eid0902.020124
Gonzalez-Salazar D, Estrada-Franco JG, Carrara AS, Aronson JF, Weaver SC.To assess the role of horses as amplification hosts during the 1993 and 1996 Mexican Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) epizootics, we subcutaneously infected 10 horses by using four different equine isolates. Most horses showed little or no disease and low or nonexistent viremia. Neurologic disease developed in only 1 horse, and brain histopathologic examination showed meningeal lymphocytic infiltration, perivascular cuffing, and focal encephalitis. Three animals showed mild meningoencephalitis without clinical disease. Viral RNA was detected in the brain of several animals 12-14 days after...
Evaluation of equine breeding farm characteristics as risk factors for development of Rhodococcus equi pneumonia in foals.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 25, 2003   Volume 222, Issue 4 467-475 doi: 10.2460/javma.2003.222.467
Chaffin MK, Cohen ND, Martens RJ.To identify farm characteristics as risk factors for the development of Rhodococcus equi pneumonia in foals. Methods: Prospective matched case-control study. Methods: 2,764 foals on 64 equine breeding farms with 9,991 horses. Methods: During 1997, participating veterinarians completed paired data collection forms, 1 for a farm with > or = 1 foal with R equi pneumonia and 1 for an unaffected control farm. Matched data were compared by use of conditional logistic regression analysis. Results: Farm characteristics found in bivariate analyses to be associated with increased risk for pneumonia caus...
Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus-vectored vaccines protect mice against anthrax spore challenge.
Infection and immunity    February 22, 2003   Volume 71, Issue 3 1491-1496 doi: 10.1128/IAI.71.3.1491-1496.2003
Lee JS, Hadjipanayis AG, Welkos SL.Anthrax, a disease usually associated with herbivores, is caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis. The current vaccine licensed for human use requires a six-dose primary series and yearly boosters and causes reactogenicity in up to 30% of vaccine recipients. A minimally reactogenic vaccine requiring fewer inoculations is warranted. Venezuelan equine encephalitis (VEE) virus has been configured for use as a vaccine vector for a wide variety of immunogens. The VEE vaccine vector is composed of a self-replicating RNA (replicon) containing all of the VEE virus nonstructural genes and a multiple...
Advances in equine immunology: Havemeyer workshop reports from Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Hortobagy, Hungary.
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    February 15, 2003   Volume 91, Issue 3-4 233-243 doi: 10.1016/s0165-2427(02)00314-8
Marti E, Horohov DW, Antzak DF, Lazary S, Paul Lunn D.The horse has been human kind's most important partner throughout history. Similarly, in the field of immunology, many critical scientific advances have depended on the horse. Equine immunology today is an active and important field of study, with a focus on control of many common infectious diseases and immunopathologic conditions of broad comparative interest. In 2001 two major equine immunology workshops were held, in Santa Fe, USA, and in Hortobagy, Hungary, with major sponsorship from the Havemeyer Foundation. This report summarizes the scientific themes and foci of those meetings.
Bacteriological and mycological findings, and in vitro antibiotic sensitivity of pathogenic staphylococci in equine skin infections.
The Veterinary record    February 15, 2003   Volume 152, Issue 5 138-141 doi: 10.1136/vr.152.5.138
Chiers K, Decostere A, Devriese LA, Haesebrouck F.No abstract available
Encephalitozoon cuniculi placentitis and abortion in a quarterhorse mare. Patterson-Kane JC, Caplazi P, Rurangirwa F, Tramontin RR, Wolfsdorf K.Encephalitozoon cuniculi is a microsporidial parasite, which has rarely been reported to cause placentitis in animals. A late-term aborted fetus and placenta from a Quarterhorse were presented to the Livestock Disease Diagnostic Center, University of Kentucky, for diagnostic examination. There was a necrotizing placentitis, with distension of many chorionic epithelial cells by intracytoplasmic vacuoles containing 1-2-microm-diameter, elongated, gram-positive organisms. The organisms were identified as E. cuniculi by electron microscopy and by polymerase chain reaction using primers to microspo...
Comparison of a serum indirect fluorescent antibody test with two Western blot tests for the diagnosis of equine protozoal myeloencephalitis. Duarte PC, Daft BM, Conrad PA, Packham AE, Gardner IA.A serum indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT) was compared with a Western blot (WB) and a modified Western blot (mWB) for diagnosis of equine protozoal myeloencephalitis (EPM). Using receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, the area under the curve of the IFAT was greater than the areaunder the curves of the WB and the mWB (P = 0.025 and P = 0.044, respectively). There was no statistically significant difference between the areas under the curves of the WBs (P > 0.05). On the basis of an arbitrarily chosen cut-off titer for a positive test result of 1:80 for the IFAT and interpret...
Hemolytic activity of Prevotella intermedia and Prevotella nigrescens strains: influence of abiotic factors in solid and liquid assays.
Research in microbiology    February 11, 2003   Volume 154, Issue 1 29-35 doi: 10.1016/s0923-2508(02)00003-7
Silva TA, Rodrigues PH, Ribeiro RN, Noronha FS, Farias Lde M, Carvalho MA.The influence of growth medium, hemin and menadione, blood source and atmosphere of incubation on the expression of hemolytic activity of 25 strains of Prevotella intermedia and Prevotella nigrescens was evaluated. The best hemolytic activity was observed for samples of both species growing in brain heart infusion agar and incubated in Brewer-like anaerobic jars for 48 h. Hemolysis was less intense and occurred later in the presence of hemin and menadione in solid media. beta-Hemolysis was detected for medium supplemented with horse or human blood and alpha-hemolysis was observed when sheep bl...
Occurrence of Malassezia spp. in horses and domestic ruminants.
Mycoses    February 8, 2003   Volume 45, Issue 8 333-337 doi: 10.1046/j.1439-0507.2002.00762.x
Crespo MJ, Abarca ML, Cabañes FJ.During a study on the occurrence of Malassezia spp. in 112 animals (50 horses, 25 goats, 25 sheep and 12 cows), Malassezia spp. were isolated from 60% of horses, 28% of sheep, 44% of goats and 58% of cows. In these animals, the occurrence of lipid-dependent species (42%) was much greater than the occurrence observed for M. pachydermatis (3%). Among the results obtained, we point out the first isolation of M. sympodialis, M. globosa and M. restricta from sheep, M. pachydermatis, M. furfur, M. sympodialis, M. obtusa, M. globosa and M. restricta from goats and M. furfur, M. slooffiae, M. obtusa, ...
Identification of a specific antigenic region of the P82 protein of Babesia equi and its potential use in serodiagnosis.
Journal of clinical microbiology    February 8, 2003   Volume 41, Issue 2 547-551 doi: 10.1128/JCM.41.2.547-551.2003
Hirata H, Xuan X, Yokoyama N, Nishikawa Y, Fujisaki K, Suzuki N, Igarashi I.The efficacy of the Be82 gene product fused with glutathione S-transferase (GST/Be82) in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the diagnosis of Babesia equi infection was reported previously (H. Hirata et al., J. Clin. Microbiol. 40:1470-1474, 2002). However, the ELISA with the GST/Be82 antigen cross-reacted with Babesia caballi-infected horse sera, despite the high rate of detection of B. equi. These results suggested that GST/Be82 has an antigen in common with B. caballi or antigenicity similar to that of B. caballi. In the present study, we constructed a series of five clones wit...
Emphysematous gastritis associated with Clostridium septicum in a horse.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    February 5, 2003   Volume 17, Issue 1 115-118 doi: 10.1892/0891-6640(2003)017<0115:egawcs>2.3.co;2
Delesalle C, Deprez P, Vanbrantegem L, Vaneechoutte M, Decostere A, Ducatelle R.No abstract available
Down-regulation of MHC class I expression by equine herpesvirus-1.
The Journal of general virology    February 1, 2003   Volume 84, Issue Pt 2 293-300 doi: 10.1099/vir.0.18612-0
Rappocciolo G, Birch J, Ellis SA.There is good evidence that cytotoxic T lymphocytes play an important role in the clearance of equine herpesvirus-1 (EHV1) in horses. We have demonstrated that, in common with other alphaherpesviruses, EHV1 infection can lead to dramatic down-regulation of MHC class I expression at the cell surface, a common strategy for pathogen evasion of the host immune response. This down-regulation is specific for MHC class I and does not reflect a general shut-off of host-cell protein synthesis. The use of monoclonal antibodies that recognize different MHC class I epitopes has demonstrated that the effec...
Case-control study of early-term abortions (early fetal losses) associated with mare reproductive loss syndrome in central Kentucky.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 31, 2003   Volume 222, Issue 2 210-217 doi: 10.2460/javma.2003.222.210
Cohen ND, Donahue JG, Carey VJ, Seahorn JL, Piercy D, Donahoe JK, Williams DM, Brown SE, Riddle TW.To identify factors associated with abortions during early gestation classified as mare reproductive loss syndrome (MRLS). Methods: Case-control study. Methods: 324 broodmares from 43 farms in central Kentucky, including 121 mares from 25 farms that had early-term abortions (ETAs) associated with MRLS (case horses), 120 mares from the same farms but that did not abort, and 83 mares from 18 farms that were not severely Impacted by MRLS. Methods: Farm managers were interviewed to obtain data on various management practices and environmental exposures for the mares. Data for case and control hors...
Comparison of Salmonella enterica serovar Abortusequi isolates of equine origin by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and fluorescent amplified-fragment length polymorphism fingerprinting.
Veterinary microbiology    January 30, 2003   Volume 92, Issue 4 379-388 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(02)00422-4
Akiba M, Uchida I, Nishimori K, Tanaka K, Anzai T, Kuwamoto Y, Wada R, Ohya T, Ito H.Equine paratyphoid is caused by Salmonella enterica serovar Abortusequi, and manifests mainly as abortion in the mare. We compared S. Abortusequi strains isolated in Japan and other countries using pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) and fluorescent amplified-fragment length polymorphism (FAFLP) analysis. PFGE analysis of S. Abortusequi strains gave 21-27 fragments ranging in size from 33 to 602kb. Although two PFGE profiles were observed among the 20 S. Abortusequi isolates in Japan, the restriction fragments originating from the chromosome were common between the two profiles. The simila...
Clostridial myonecrosis in horses (37 cases 1985-2000).
Equine veterinary journal    January 30, 2003   Volume 35, Issue 1 86-92 doi: 10.2746/042516403775467513
Peek SF, Semrad SD, Perkins GA.Previous reports of clostridial myonecrosis have either focused on individual case reports or have been small retrospective studies reporting very high mortality rates. Objective: The objective of this study was to describe the outcome of cases of clostridial myonecrosis submitted to 2 referral equine hospitals in the United States over a 15 year period. Methods: A retrospective study of case material selected on the basis of positive Clostridium spp. culture or the identification of Clostridium spp. by specific fluorescent antibody testing from soft tissue wounds was performed at Cornell and ...
Occurrence of infectious upper respiratory tract disease and response to vaccination in horses on six sentinel premises in northern Colorado.
Equine veterinary journal    January 30, 2003   Volume 35, Issue 1 72-77 doi: 10.2746/042516403775467379
Mumford EL, Traub-Dargatz JL, Carman J, Callan RJ, Collins JK, Goltz KL, Romm SR, Tarr SF, Salman MD.Horses vaccinated against common agents of infectious upper respiratory disease (IURD) may not have detectable serum antibody and may not be protected from clinical disease. Objective: The objectives of this study were to 1) investigate the serological response of horses to vaccination against influenza virus (H3N8 and H7N7) and equine herpesviruses (EHV) in a field setting and 2) evaluate associations among vaccination status, serum antibody concentrations, and occurrences of IURD in monitored horses. Methods: In this study, horses on 6 Colorado premises were vaccinated parenterally against i...