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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.
An epidemiological investigation of farms with Potomac horse fever (equine monocytic ehrlichiosis).
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica. Supplementum    January 1, 1988   Volume 84 319-322 
Gordon JC, Bech-Nielsen S, Kohn C, Farrar W, Parsons M, Foster W.No abstract available
Effect of sample freezing on the isolation of Mycoplasma spp. from the clitoral fossa of the mare.
Canadian journal of veterinary research = Revue canadienne de recherche veterinaire    January 1, 1988   Volume 52, Issue 1 147-148 
Bermudez V, Miller RB, Johnson W, Rosendal S, Ruhnke L.The growth of Mycoplasma equigenitalium and Mycoplasma subdolum from specimens collected from the clitoral fossa of each of four Standardbred mares was not diminished by freezing of the specimens in liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C) for up to 30 days when compared to samples cultured immediately.
[Actual problems of leptospirosis in animals in Poland].
Przeglad epidemiologiczny    January 1, 1988   Volume 42, Issue 4 364-369 
Kocik T.No abstract available
[Infection with equine herpesvirus and its manifestation in the central nervous system of the horse].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1988   Volume 16, Issue 3 295-302 
Thein P, Brown K.Infections with EHV1 can lead to manifestation at the CNS of horses followed by encephalomyelitis and "equine stroke". Horse experiments could confirm the clinical picture and gave links to the potential pathogenesis of the disease. We also have been in the position to isolate and characterize an EHV4 virus out of the brain of a horse with CNS disorders. The two viruses carry different biological properties which obviously dominate the pathogenesis. These properties as well as experimental and field cases are described and different diagnostic tests are discussed.
Asinine herpesvirus genomes: comparison with those of the equine herpesviruses.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1988   Volume 101, Issue 3-4 183-190 doi: 10.1007/BF01310999
Browning GF, Ficorilli N, Studdert MJ.Two previously unknown and distinct herpesviruses were isolated from donkeys. One, with the characteristics of a betaherpesvirus, was isolated from the leukocytes of an apparently healthy donkey, while the second, an alphaherpesvirus, was recovered from the nasal cavity of donkeys given high doses of corticosteroids, and caused rhinitis in two seronegative weanling donkeys when they were intranasally infected. Few, if any, restriction endonuclease fragments were shared by the donkey betaherpesvirus, equine herpesvirus 2 (EHV 2) or EHV 5, a second distinctly different equine betaherpesvirus, no...
Exploratory celiotomy for suspected urinary tract disruption in neonatal foals: a review of 18 cases.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 1 13-17 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01443.x
Adams R, Koterba AM, Cudd TC, Baker WA.The medical records of 18 neonatal foals, in which exploratory celiotomies were performed for suspected urinary tract lesions, were reviewed. Despite clinical signs and laboratory values indicative of disruption of the urinary tract, three foals did not have a site of urinary tract leakage at surgery. Eight foals had ruptured bladders and seven foals had urachal lesions. Ultrasonography was used as a pre-operative diagnostic procedure in eight foals to evaluate the presence of free peritoneal fluid and urinary tract integrity. Nine foals were alive six months after discharge. Seven of the nine...
Host responses to Borrelia burgdorferi in dogs and horses.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    January 1, 1988   Volume 539 221-234 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1988.tb31856.x
Bosler EM, Cohen DP, Schulze TL, Olsen C, Bernard W, Lissman B.By using paired sera the IgM and IgG host responses were analyzed in dogs with ELISA and Western blot techniques. Antibodies in clinical seropositive dogs bound to 4-25 IgM and up to 40 or more IgG antigenic determinants. Early IgM response to the 41-kDa flagellin persisted for at least 9 months and involved as many as seven other peptides. IgG response expanded later in the disease and involved more immunogens than are currently recognized in late human disease. A percentage of asymptomatic dogs that later developed clinical symptoms were seropositive. Immunoblot studies suggested that B. bur...
Ultrastructural description of a new chytrid genus of caecum anaerobe, Caecomyces equi gen. nov., sp. nov., assigned to the Neocallimasticaceae.
Bio Systems    January 1, 1988   Volume 21, Issue 3-4 403-415 doi: 10.1016/0303-2647(88)90039-1
Gold JJ, Heath IB, Bauchop T.Vegetative and reproductive stages of Caecomyces equi gen. nov., sp. nov. isolated from the horse caecum were examined by light and electron microscopy. This organism, which is similar to isolates known as Sphaeromonas communis, produces uniflagellate, uninucleate zoospores whose perikinetosomal structures, i.e. circumflagellar ring, spur, struts and scoop, are similar in many respects to those described in species of Neocallimastix. Microtubular roots extend basally from the spur and associate with hydrogenosomes and the nucleus. Another group of microtubules radiates laterally in a fan-shape...
[The diagnosis of morbus maculosus in horses].
Tierarztliche Praxis    January 1, 1988   Volume 16, Issue 4 385-394 
Jaeschke G, Wintzer HJ.This is a review on Morbus maculosus equorum (purpura haemorrhagica) on the base of literature data and of a case report on 13 own patients. It is shown, that the clinical picture of this disease has not changed within the last 150 years. Clinical main symptoms are haemorrhagic diathesis (petechiae, ecchymosis, suggillations) as well as peripheral edema and fever. The main haematological findings are neutrophilia, mostly going along with shift to the left and lymphopenia. In the last few years thrombocytopenia was also described in some cases. Basic therapeutics are glucocorticoids and penicil...
Serologic response of Babesia equi-infected horses as measured by complement-fixation and indirect fluorescent antibody tests.
Veterinary parasitology    January 1, 1988   Volume 26, Issue 3-4 199-205 doi: 10.1016/0304-4017(88)90088-x
Kuttler KL, Goff WL, Gipson CA, Blackburn BO.Both the complement-fixation test (CFT) and the indirect fluorescent antibody test (IFAT) were conducted on weekly serum samples from nine Arab geldings for 28 days before and 256 days after their exposure to Babesia equi of European origin. On an average the IFAT became positive 8 days before the CFT and showed higher relative serum titer increases. Both test procedures successfully detected infection and neither showed an appreciable drop in titer during this time frame, with the exception of the CFT, which showed a transient drop immediately following treatment with imidocarb. A test conduc...
Epidemiologic studies of Lyme disease in horses and their public health significance.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences    January 1, 1988   Volume 539 244-257 doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.1988.tb31858.x
Cohen D, Bosler EM, Bernard W, Meirs D, Eisner R, Schulze TL.A serologic survey of horses in the New Jersey-Pennsylvania area demonstrated that about 10% (6.2-14.2%) have significant levels of serum antibody to Borrelia burgdorferi. However, in a highly endemic area of central New Jersey, up to 60% of the mares and yearlings samples on one farm were seropositive. In 1983, sera from this same farm exhibited only 12% positives in mares and 35% positives in yearlings. Longitudinal studies of paired sera obtained from individual yearlings over a 6-month period in 1985 showed that 34% of them declined during the period. A new clinical syndrome associated wit...
Difference in growth behavior of human, swine, equine, and avian influenza viruses at a high temperature.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1988   Volume 100, Issue 3-4 231-244 doi: 10.1007/BF01487686
Murakami Y, Nerome K, Yoshioka Y, Mizuno S, Oya A.Growth characteristics of a wide range of influenza A viruses from different mammals and bird species were examined in an established line of canine kidney (MDCK) cells at an ordinary (37 degrees C) and a high temperature (42 degrees C). Although all viruses employed in the present study possessed a capability of replicating at 37 degrees C, virus growth at 42 degrees C showed considerable variation and reflected differences in the natural hosts of the isolates. All reference strains and isolates from bird species grew well in the MDCK cells maintained at 42 degrees C, but human viruses did no...
Antigenic variation of equine infectious anemia virus as detected by virus neutralization. Brief report.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1988   Volume 98, Issue 1-2 91-97 doi: 10.1007/BF01321009
Kono Y.The antigenic structure of 16 viruses isolated from four horses which were inoculated with a clone of equine infectious anemia (EIA) virus was compared by the neutralization test. The antigenic structure of viruses isolated after development of neutralizing antibody differed from virus to virus. Back mutation of the antigenic structure was also demonstrated by serial passage of the virus in horses. These results suggest that EIA virus is subject to multidirectional antigenic variation. The possibility that the variants originated in the heterologous virus population in the inoculum seems to be...
Antigenic mapping of the envelope proteins of equine infectious anemia virus: identification of a neutralization domain and a conserved region on glycoprotein 90.
Archives of virology    January 1, 1988   Volume 98, Issue 3-4 213-224 doi: 10.1007/BF01322170
Hussain KA, Issel CJ, Schnorr KL, Rwambo PM, West M, Montelaro RC.Monoclonal antibodies (MCAbs) were used to dissect the antigenic sites of the surface glycoproteins of the prototype cell-adapted Wyoming strain of equine infectious anemia virus (EIAV). Serologic reactivities of these MCAbs were determined by ELISA, additive ELISA, competitive ELISA, and Western blot assays. The results indicated that antigenic reactivity of gp90 was localized on at least four distinct epitopes, two of which were important in neutralization. Our studies also revealed that these epitopes were localized on overlapping antigenic sites on gp90. On the other hand, only two distinc...
Serologic correlation of suspected Leptospira interrogans serovar pomona-induced uveitis in a group of horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 15, 1987   Volume 191, Issue 12 1576-1578 
Sillerud CL, Bey RF, Ball M, Bistner SI.After the observation of 2 horses with uveitis on a horse farm in the Minnesota River valley, 100 horses from this geographic area were given ophthalmologic examinations and were evaluated serologically for leptospirosis. A statistically significant (P less than 0.001) association was observed between the finding of antibodies against Leptospira interrogans serovar pomona and uveitis.
Outbreak of equine influenza in India.
The Veterinary record    December 12, 1987   Volume 121, Issue 24 569-570 
Uppal PK, Yadav MP.No abstract available
Rapid detection of viral-specific antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA).
Veterinary immunology and immunopathology    December 1, 1987   Volume 17, Issue 1-4 453-464 doi: 10.1016/0165-2427(87)90161-9
Winston S, Fiscus S, Hesterberg L, Matsushita T, Mildbrand M, Porter J, Teramoto Y.The development of three separate rapid ELISAs for detecting antibodies in host serum to three different viruses is described. These include: 1. A direct antigen assay using enzyme labelled anti-canine Ig for detecting antibodies to canine parvovirus, 2. A competitive ELISA using a feline infectious peritonitis virus-specific monoclonal antibody labelled with enzyme, and 3. A competitive ELISA using an equine infectious anemia virus-specific monoclonal antibody and enzyme labelled antigen, p. 26. The utility and benefits of each of the three approaches is emphasized.
Encephalitis associated with Borrelia burgdorferi infection in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1987   Volume 191, Issue 11 1457-1458 
Burgess EC, Mattison M.Infection with Borrelia burgdorferi was associated with encephalitis in a horse. The horse lived in an area of Wisconsin endemic for B burgdorferi infection. Borrelia burgdorferi was isolated from the brain, but rabies virus was not detected in the brain. Serum obtained from the horse had a B burgdorferi antibody titer of 1:2,048, but was negative for antibodies to eastern and western encephalomyelitis.
The transstadial transmission of Babesia caballi by Rhipicephalus evertsi evertsi.
The Onderstepoort journal of veterinary research    December 1, 1987   Volume 54, Issue 4 655-656 
de Waal DT, Potgieter FT.Rhipicephalus evertsi evertsi larvae were fed on the ears of rabbits. Seven days after larval infestation, unfed, newly moulted nymphae were manually removed to infest a splenectomized donkey showing a patent Babesia caballi infection. Engorged nymphae were collected from the donkey and the ensuing adult ticks were placed on a susceptible horse. The horse contracted a B. caballi infection showing a prepatent period of 19 days after tick infestation. A very low parasitaemia, (highest score 2), which was patent for only 10 days, was recorded. The lowest packed cell volume recorded was 16%.
Eumycotic mycetoma: review and report of a cutaneous lesion caused by Pseudallescheria boydii in a horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1987   Volume 191, Issue 11 1459-1461 
McEntee M.A cutaneous mass (1.5 cm in diameter) was removed from the head of a horse and was diagnosed histologically as eumycotic mycetoma. Immunofluorescence, performed on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue, identified Pseudallescheria boydii as the etiologic agent. Findings from earlier reports of eumycotic mycetoma were compared with those of this horse.
Role of the host immune response in selection of equine infectious anemia virus variants.
Journal of virology    December 1, 1987   Volume 61, Issue 12 3783-3789 doi: 10.1128/JVI.61.12.3783-3789.1987
Carpenter S, Evans LH, Sevoian M, Chesebro B.Equine infectious anemia virus was isolated from peripheral blood leukocytes collected during two early febrile cycles of an experimentally infected horse. RNase T1-resistant oligonucleotide fingerprint analyses indicated that the nucleotide sequences of the isolates differed by approximately 0.25% and that the differences appeared randomly distributed throughout the genome. Serum collected in the interval between virus isolations was able to distinguish the isolates by membrane immunofluorescence on live cells. However, no neutralizing antibody was detected in the interval between virus isola...
Complications associated with Streptococcus equi infection on a horse farm.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1987   Volume 191, Issue 11 1446-1448 
Sweeney CR, Whitlock RH, Meirs DA, Whitehead SC, Barningham SO.Complications associated with Streptococcus equi infection developed in 15 (20.3%) of 74 horses on one farm included death, guttural pouch empyema, purpura hemorrhagica, upper respiratory tract obstruction, pneumonia, pleuropneumonia, agalactia, mesenteric lymph node abscessation, and periorbital abscessation. Death was attributed to pneumonia in 3 horses and to upper respiratory tract obstruction in 2 horses. One horse was euthanatized because of severe purpura hemorrhagica.
Antigenic variation and lentivirus persistence: variations in envelope gene sequences during EIAV infection resemble changes reported for sequential isolates of HIV.
Virology    December 1, 1987   Volume 161, Issue 2 321-331 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(87)90124-3
Payne SL, Fang FD, Liu CP, Dhruva BR, Rwambo P, Issel CJ, Montelaro RC.The extent and nature of genomic variation among nine antigenically distinct EIAV isolates recovered during sequential clinical episodes from two experimentally infected ponies were examined by restriction fragment analysis and nucleotide sequencing. Only minor variations in restriction enzyme patterns were observed among the viral genomes. In contrast, env gene sequences of four isolates from one pony revealed numerous clustered base substitutions. Divergence in env gene nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences between pairs of virus isolates ranged from 0.62 to 3.4% env gene mutation rate...
Safety of equine rabies immune globulin.
Lancet (London, England)    November 28, 1987   Volume 2, Issue 8570 1275 doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(87)91885-x
Wilde H, Chomchey P, Prakongsri S, Punyaratabandhu P.No abstract available
Diarrhea associated with enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis in foals.
American journal of veterinary research    November 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 11 1565-1567 
Myers LL, Shoop DS, Byars TD.Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis (ETBF) was isolated from the feces of 10 of 40 Thoroughbred foals with naturally acquired diarrhea. Of the 10 foals positive for ETBF, 6 were less than or equal to 7 days old. Fecal specimens from 4 of the 10 foals also were positive for rotavirus, and one fecal specimen was positive for Salmonella enteritidis. Clinical or hematologic differences were not evident between foals infected with ETBF only and those infected with ETBF and another recognized enteric pathogen. Only 1 of 10 foals infected with ETBF died. Of 25 adult rabbits with ligated ceca, 23 dev...
[The occurrence of rotavirus and fimbriae-bearing E. coli types in foals with diarrhea].
Berliner und Munchener tierarztliche Wochenschrift    November 1, 1987   Volume 100, Issue 11 364-366 
Herbst W, Zschöck M, Hamann HP, Lange H, Weiss R, Danner K, Schliesser T.No abstract available
Genetic restriction of cytolysis during equid herpesvirus 1 subtype 2 infection.
Clinical and experimental immunology    November 1, 1987   Volume 70, Issue 2 276-282 
Bridges CG, Edington N.Six Welsh Mountain pony foals were experimentally infected with a subtype 2 isolate of Equid Herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) and subsequently examined for T cell mediated cytotoxicity against both subtypes. Cytotoxicity was not observed at 3 or 7 days after primary exposure but virus-specific, and genetically restricted, cytotoxicity of EHV-1-labelled autologous skin fibroblasts could be demonstrated 7 and 21 days after the animals were given a second exposure to live virus. Killing of subtype 2 antigen-labelled targets was more efficient than subtype 1 coated cells. This finding was paralleled by the o...
Capsule types of Klebsiella pneumoniae isolated from the genital tract of mares with metritis, extra-genital sites of healthy mares and the genital tract of stallions.
Veterinary microbiology    November 1, 1987   Volume 15, Issue 3 219-228 doi: 10.1016/0378-1135(87)90076-9
Kikuchi N, Iguchi I, Hiramune T.A survey of K. pneumoniae was performed on cervical swabs, feces and nasal swabs of mares and on samples from the genital tract of stallions from 1980 to 1986 in south-western Hokkaido, Japan. K1 was the predominant type (79 of 88, 89.8%) in the metritis cases due to K. pneumoniae in mares of racing breeds. The same type was isolated from semen and swabs of the fossa glandis of 6 of 20 (30.0%) of the stallions of racing breeds. Heavily encapsulated and less heavily encapsulated K1 strains were isolated from the stallions. Mares bred to stallions carrying heavily encapsulated strains developed ...
Studies of the pathogenesis of Rhodococcus equi infection in foals.
Australian veterinary journal    November 1, 1987   Volume 64, Issue 11 332-339 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1987.tb06061.x
Barton MD, Embury DH.Pyogranulomatous pneumonia was induced in Thoroughbred foals by intranasal challenge with freeze-dried cultures of Rhodococcus equi (previously Corynebacterium equi). The incubation period was about 18 days and clinical signs were not seen for a further week. There were marked seasonal and individual foal differences in responses to infection. Elevations in serum caeruloplasmin oxidase activity and copper concentrations appeared to be sensitive indicators of infection. Serum zinc concentrations and serum alpha-mannosidase and alkaline phosphatase activities fell in the more severely infected f...
An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for measurement of antibodies against equine herpesvirus 2 in equine sera.
Acta virologica    November 1, 1987   Volume 31, Issue 6 468-474 
Fu ZF, Denby L, Lien DH, Robinson AJ.An indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was developed for the detection of antibodies against equine herpesvirus type 2 (EHV-2) in equine sera. The optimal conditions of antigen concentration, and serum and conjugate dilutions were established by chequerboard titrations. When the standard ELISA test was used for titration of test sera, it was found to give titres approximately 1500 times higher than those obtained in the virus neutralization (VN) test, and a correlation coefficient of 0.815 was obtained between these two tests on 42 equine sera. All the positive serum samples by ...