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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.
Actinobacillus suis-like organisms in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    July 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 7 1036-1038 
Jang SS, Biberstein EL, Hirsh DC.Actinobacillus suis-like organisms have been recognized in equine specimens at the University of California Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital since 1975. The most common source (65%) of the organism was transtracheal washings. The organism was gram-negative, produced hemolysis on blood agar, and gave a positive reaction for oxidase, urease, o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-galactopyranoside, and esculin. Carbohydrate reactions were variable, consisting of 4 main patterns. Actinobacillus suis-like organisms were (90%) sensitive to therapeutic concentrations of amikacin, cephalothin, chloramphenicol, gen...
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...
Antibody response of horses to Rhodococcus equi antigens. Chirino-Trejo JM, Prescott JF.The antigens extracted from strains belonging to seven capsular serotypes of Rhodococcus equi, as well as from two wild strains isolated from pneumonic foals, were examined. Whole-cell antigens and soluble products present in broth culture supernatants were separated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, electroblotted onto nitrocellulose, and stained with serum from hyperimmunized rabbits or foals. Foal sera used included sera from pneumonic animals with known titer to equi factors; from animals bled monthly on a farm with enzootic pneumonia, and from animals bled mont...
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...
Vesicular exanthema of swine virus: isolation and serotyping of field samples. Edwards JF, Yedloutschnig RJ, Dardiri AH, Callis JJ.Virus isolation was attempted from 262 field samples of vesicular material collected during the outbreaks of vesicular exanthema of swine in the U.S.A. from 1952-54. Using primary swine kidney culture, viral cytopathogenic agents were isolated from 76.3% of the samples. However, an overall recovery rate of 82.1% was obtained after samples negative in tissue culture were inoculated intradermally in susceptible swine. All vesicular exanthema of swine virus isolates were identified as serotype B51 using complement fixation and serum neutralization tests. Two isolates did not react with antisera t...
Cellulitis and subcutaneous abscesses caused by Rhodococcus equi infection in a foal.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1987   Volume 190, Issue 12 1559-1561 
Perdrizet JA, Scott DW.Cellulitis and subcutaneous abscess formation was diagnosed in a 3-month-old Thoroughbred filly. Clinical signs consisted of a large ulcerated plaque, with satellite pustules on the medial aspect of the right hock and subcutaneous abscesses in the right inguinal and mammary gland areas. Laboratory analysis revealed mature neutrophilia. Rhodococcus equi was isolated from the cellulitis and the subcutaneous abscess. Oral administration of erythromycin and rifampin for 35 days resulted in a clinical cure.
Pulmonary aspergillosis in a horse with myelomonocytic leukemia.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1987   Volume 190, Issue 12 1562-1564 
Blue J, Perdrizet J, Brown E.Acute myelomonocytic leukemia was diagnosed in a 2-year-old Standardbred mare that had hind limb edema and fever unresponsive to antibiotics. The mare had anemia, thrombocytopenia, and leukocytosis, with circulating myeloblasts and monocytoid cells. A bone marrow specimen was hypercellular, with myeloblasts and monocytoid cells. Peroxidase, chloroacetate esterase, and alpha naphthyl acetate esterase activities were detected in many bone marrow cells. Interstitial pulmonary densities were seen radiographically. The mare was euthanatized and necropsied. Infiltrates of leukemic cells were found m...
Brucella abortus biotype 1 arthritis in a horse.
Australian veterinary journal    June 1, 1987   Volume 64, Issue 6 190 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1987.tb09681.x
Carrigan MJ, Cockram FA, Nash GV.No abstract available
Changes in restriction enzyme pattern of the equine herpes virus type 1 (EHV-1) strain Rac H DNA during attenuation.
Zentralblatt fur Veterinarmedizin. Reihe B. Journal of veterinary medicine. Series B    June 1, 1987   Volume 34, Issue 4 310-313 doi: 10.1111/j.1439-0450.1987.tb00401.x
Meyer H, Hübert PH, Eichhorn W.No abstract available
[Serologic follow-up studies of viral arteritis in horses at a stud farm]. Herbst W, Schliesser T.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...
The host preferences of Culiseta inornata in southwestern Manitoba.
Journal of the American Mosquito Control Association    June 1, 1987   Volume 3, Issue 2 219-221 
Anderson RA, Gallaway WJ.The capillary tube precipitin test was used to determine the host utilization patterns of Culiseta inornata in southwestern Manitoba. Ruminant blood was identified in 83.3% and equine blood in 15.8% of 1,036 positively reacting blood-meals. Human, swine and avian blood accounted for 0.9% of these blood-meals and mixed blood-meals accounted for 1.5% of the total. Culiseta inornata preferentially fed on large mammals, and selection between cattle and horses reflected the relative abundance of these two hosts rather than a specific preference for either one.
[Analysis of equine influenza H3N8 viruses].
Voprosy virusologii    May 1, 1987   Volume 32, Issue 3 298-300 
Nerome K.No abstract available
University incontinence in a shire foal due to ureteral ectopia.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 3 244-247 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb01396.x
Houlton JE, Wright IM, Matic S, Herrtage ME.No abstract available
Halicephalobus deletrix infection in a horse.
Equine veterinary journal    May 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 3 255-260 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb01399.x
Blunden AS, Khalil LF, Webbon PM.No abstract available
Suppurative splenitis and peritonitis in a horse after gastric ulceration caused by larvae of Gasterophilus intestinalis.
Australian veterinary journal    May 1, 1987   Volume 64, Issue 5 155-158 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1987.tb09669.x
Dart AJ, Hutchins DR, Begg AP.A 12-year-old Thoroughbred mare, with a history of anorexia, dramatic weight loss, fluctuating pyrexia and intermittent diarrhoea after an episode of colic, was presented for examination with depression, emaciation and ataxia. Thoracic and abdominal paracenteses yielded copious quantities of inflammatory exudate. Palpation per rectum revealed an enlarged spleen. The primary alterations in haematology included a severe leucocytosis with a left shift, and a hyperproteinaemia characterised by hypoalbuminaemia and hypergammaglobulinaemia. Post-mortem examination revealed a low grade pleurisy and p...
Phagocytic function of equine neutrophils exposed to Mycoplasma felis in vitro and in vivo.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 5 758-762 
Rosendal S, Lumsden JH, Viel L, Physick-Sheard PW.Neutrophils were isolated from the peripheral blood of adult equids (group 1) and were purified on a density gradient of polyvinylpyrrolidone-coated silica gel. A bactericidal assay was developed, using an equine skin isolate of Staphylococcus epidermidis as target bacterium in medium containing pooled fresh equine serum for opsonization. Significant (P less than 0.05) killing was observed after 60 or 120 minutes' incubation. Reduction in bactericidal function of blood neutrophils was not found after incubation with a virulent strain of Mycoplasma felis for 30 or 60 minutes. Similarly, the fun...
Antimicrobial susceptibility of microorganisms isolated from equine orthopedic patients.
Veterinary surgery : VS    May 1, 1987   Volume 16, Issue 3 197-201 doi: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1987.tb00938.x
Snyder JR, Pascoe JR, Hirsh DC.Positive cultures were obtained from 60 equine orthopedic cases during a 12 year period (1974-1985). These cases consisted of 34 long or cuboidal bone fractures, 13 arthrotomy/arthroscopy procedures for removal or internal fixation of a fracture, 7 proximal splint bone fractures, and 6 facial or mandibular fractures. Excluding the 13 arthrotomies, only 10 (21%) of the 47 were open fractures. Multiple organisms were isolated from 36 cases (20 long or cuboidal bone fractures, 7 splint bone fractures, 5 mandibular fractures, and 4 intra-articular fractures). Of the 142 isolates, 35 (24%) were mem...
Regulation of equine herpesvirus type 1 gene expression: characterization of immediate early, early, and late transcription.
Virology    May 1, 1987   Volume 158, Issue 1 79-87 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(87)90240-6
Gray WL, Baumann RP, Robertson AT, Caughman GB, O'Callaghan DJ, Staczek J.The regulation of equine herpesvirus type 1 (EHV-1) transcription was examined in infected rabbit kidney cells using metabolic inhibitors. In order to map EHV-1 immediate early, early, and late transcripts, viral RNA was 32P-labeled in vivo and hybridized to EHV-1 DNA restriction fragments immobilized on nitrocellulose filters. Immediate early viral RNA was mapped to one region of the viral genome within the inverted repeat DNA sequences (map units 0.78-0.83 and 0.95-1.0). Northern blot hybridization analysis using a 32P-labeled cloned DNA probe from this region identified a single immediate e...
Genomic heterogeneity of equine betaherpesviruses.
The Journal of general virology    May 1, 1987   Volume 68 ( Pt 5) 1441-1447 doi: 10.1099/0022-1317-68-5-1441
Browning GF, Studdert MJ.The genomes of 51 isolates of slowly cytopathic equine herpesviruses were examined by digestion with restriction endonucleases. Forty-seven of the isolates showed considerable fragment pattern heterogeneity although common fragments were evident, especially when any two isolates were compared or when they were digested with SalI. Fifteen of the 47 viruses, selected for their diverse fragment patterns, showed a high degree of homology in Southern blot hybridization. In contrast, four viruses, representing three epidemiologically distinct isolations, shared few, if any, comigrating fragments wit...
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.
Isolation of a Moraxella sp from horses with conjunctivitis.
Australian veterinary journal    April 1, 1987   Volume 64, Issue 4 118-119 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1987.tb09647.x
Huntington PJ, Coloe PJ, Bryden JD, Macdonald F.No abstract available
Biochemical characteristics of Klebsiella pneumoniae derived from horses.
Nihon juigaku zasshi. The Japanese journal of veterinary science    April 1, 1987   Volume 49, Issue 2 279-283 doi: 10.1292/jvms1939.49.279
Eguchi M, Yokomizo Y, Kuniyasu C.No abstract available
An equine rotavirus (FI-14 strain) which bears both subgroup I and subgroup II specificities on its VP6.
Virology    April 1, 1987   Volume 157, Issue 2 488-496 doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(87)90291-1
Hoshino Y, Gorziglia M, Valdesuso J, Askaa J, Glass RI, Kapikian AZ.An equinine rotavirus FI-14 strain, originally isolated from a diarrheic foal in New York state, was shown to belong to serotype 3 by neutralization assay. In addition, it was found to react with both subgroup I and subgroup II monoclonal antibodies by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), thus representing the first rotavirus strain to exhibit both subgroup specificities. By using hybridoma technology, we successfully produced monoclonal antibodies directed against the major inner capsid protein VP6 (the sixth gene product) of FI-14 virus. Such monoclonal antibodies reacted specifically ...
Rational selection of antimicrobial drugs for treatment of infections of horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1987   Volume 3, Issue 1 191-220 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30698-3
Brumbaugh GW.The goal of antimicrobial drug use is quite specific. Consideration of many microbe-related, host-related, and drug-related factors is necessary for appropriate selection and use of antimicrobial drugs in equine patients. The concepts and data presented in this article demonstrate that fact. At the risk of oversimplification, "The bug denotes the drug, and the horse directs the course."
Antimicrobic susceptibility of bacterial pathogens from horses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 1, 1987   Volume 3, Issue 1 181-190 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30697-1
Hirsh DC, Jang SS.Rational choice of an antimicrobial agent requires that the condition for which the drug is prescribed contain an infectious agent and, if so, knowledge of the susceptibility of the microorganism to antimicrobial drugs. Unfortunately, most infectious conditions necessitate the use of an antimicrobic drug before data from the microbiology laboratory are available. The data presented are meant to serve as a guide in the choice of antimicrobic drugs for treatment of infectious processes of the horse before knowledge of the nature of the microorganism isolated as well as its susceptibility to anti...
Pathology of equine phycomycosis.
The veterinary quarterly    April 1, 1987   Volume 9, Issue 2 180-184 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1987.9694095
Berrocal A, van den Ingh TS.The pathological findings in three cases of equine phycomycosis in Costa Rica are described. Two cutaneous (Pythium sp) and one nasal lesion (Conidiobolus) were observed.
Segmental atresia of the transverse colon in a foal with concurrent equine herpes virus-1 infection.
The Cornell veterinarian    April 1, 1987   Volume 77, Issue 2 119-121 
Anderson WI, King JM, Rothwell JT.Segmental atresia of the transverse colon was observed at necropsy in a neonatal foal. The dorsal and ventral components of the large colon were fused, and ended blindly. The small colon was collapsed and completely closed at its cranial end. The right and left dorsal and ventral colons were fused into one blind-ended tube. Histologically, eosinophilic intranuclear inclusion bodies demonstrative of Equine Rhinopneumonitis were present in the thymus.
Comparison of naturally occurring poliovirus-reactive immunoglobulins in bovine and equine sera.
Japanese journal of medical science & biology    April 1, 1987   Volume 40, Issue 2 61-74 doi: 10.7883/yoken1952.40.61
Urasawa S, Urasawa T, Ishizawa F, Taniguchi K.Bovine and equine sera were screened for poliovirus-reactive immunoglobulins (PRIgs) by means of neutralization and precipitation reactions with type 1 poliovirus. Bovine serum B1826 and B36 were found to contain such PRIgs from their reactivity to various PRIgs-resistant mutants of type 1 poliovirus origin. Neutralization and precipitation reactions with six mono-specific antibodies obtained by absorbing antiserum with each of the six different PRIgs-resistant virus mutants revealed that three antibodies were active in precipitation reaction while the others were substantially ineffective. On...
Toxigenic characteristics of Clostridium perfringens type C in enterotoxemia of domestic animals. Niilo L.Eleven Clostridium perfringens type C strains isolated from fatal cases of hemorrhagic enterotoxemia of Canadian calves, a piglet, and a foal were studied for the production of soluble antigens. All the isolates from calves and a foal failed to produce delta toxin, but were capable of producing large amounts of lethal beta toxin. A strain isolated from a piglet produced delta, but very little beta toxin. Other differences were relatively minor. The results indicated that young domestic animals may be susceptible to all subtypes of C. perfringens type C. A simple method of using blood agar plat...