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Topic:Influenza

Equine influenza is a highly contagious respiratory disease caused by influenza A viruses, specifically affecting horses. The disease is characterized by symptoms such as fever, coughing, nasal discharge, and lethargy. Transmission occurs primarily through aerosolized droplets and direct contact, leading to rapid spread among susceptible populations. Vaccination is a common preventive measure, though the virus's ability to mutate necessitates ongoing surveillance and vaccine updates. This page gathers peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the virology, epidemiology, clinical presentation, and management strategies of equine influenza, with a focus on its impact on equine health and welfare.
Efficacy of a cold-adapted, intranasal, equine influenza vaccine: challenge trials.
Equine veterinary journal    January 5, 2002   Volume 33, Issue 7 637-643 doi: 10.2746/042516401776249354
Townsend HG, Penner SJ, Watts TC, Cook A, Bogdan J, Haines DM, Griffin S, Chambers T, Holland RE, Whitaker-Dowling P, Youngner JS, Sebring RW.A randomised, controlled, double-blind, influenza virus, aerosol challenge of horses was undertaken to determine the efficacy of a cold-adapted, temperature sensitive, modified-live virus, intranasal, equine influenza vaccine. Ninety 11-month-old influenza-naïve foals were assigned randomly to 3 groups (20 vaccinates and 10 controls per group) and challenged 5 weeks, 6 and 12 months after a single vaccination. Challenges were performed on Day 0 in a plastic-lined chamber. Between Days 1 and 10, animals were examined daily for evidence of clinical signs of influenza. Nasal swabs for virus isol...
A new modified live equine influenza virus vaccine: phenotypic stability, restricted spread and efficacy against heterologous virus challenge.
Equine veterinary journal    January 5, 2002   Volume 33, Issue 7 630-636 doi: 10.2746/042516401776249291
Chambers TM, Holland RE, Tudor LR, Townsend HG, Cook A, Bogdan J, Lunn DP, Hussey S, Whitaker-Dowling P, Youngner JS, Sebring RW, Penner SJ....Flu Avert IN vaccine is a new, live attenuated virus vaccine for equine influenza. We tested this vaccine in vivo to ascertain 1) its safety and stability when subjected to serial horse to horse passage, 2) whether it spread spontaneously from horse to horse and 3) its ability to protect against heterologous equine influenza challenge viruses of epidemiological relevance. For the stability study, the vaccine was administered to 5 ponies. Nasal swabs were collected and pooled fluids administered directly to 4 successive groups of naïve ponies by intranasal inoculation. Viruses isolated from th...
Caspase activation in equine influenza virus induced apoptotic cell death.
Veterinary microbiology    December 26, 2001   Volume 84, Issue 4 357-365 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(01)00468-0
Lin C, Holland RE, Donofrio JC, McCoy MH, Tudor LR, Chambers TM.Equine influenza virus (EIV) is the leading cause of acute respiratory infection in horses worldwide. In recent years, the precise mechanism by which influenza infection kills host cells is being re-evaluated. In this report, we examined whether caspases, a group of intracellular proteases, are activated following EIV infection and contribute to EIV-mediated cell death. Western blotting analysis indicated that a nuclear target of caspase-3, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) was proteolytically cleaved in EIV-infected MDCK cells, but not in mock-infected cells. In comparison with caspase-3 spe...
Serological diagnosis of equine influenza using the hemagglutinin protein produced in a baculovirus expression system.
Journal of virological methods    September 7, 2001   Volume 98, Issue 1 1-8 doi: 10.1016/s0166-0934(01)00332-9
Sugiura T, Sugita S, Imagawa H, Kanaya T, Ishiyama S, Saeki N, Uchiyama A, Tanigawa M, Kuwano A.The hemagglutinin (HA) protein of an equine influenza strain, A/equine/La Plata/1/93 (LP/93), was produced using a baculovirus expression system. Silkworm larvae inoculated with recombinant baculovirus expressed high quantities of the HA protein which was then purified to greater than 95% purity by fetuin-affinity chromatography. Purified HA protein was used subsequently in an ELISA for detection of antibodies in horse sera. Two hundred serum samples from vaccinated racehorses were reacted on ELISA plates coated with 40.0 ng/ml of purified HA protein. Subsequent optical density (OD) levels rev...
Derivation and characterization of a live attenuated equine influenza vaccine virus.
American journal of veterinary research    August 11, 2001   Volume 62, Issue 8 1290-1294 doi: 10.2460/ajvr.2001.62.1290
Youngner JS, Whitaker-Dowling P, Chambers TM, Rushlow KE, Sebring R.To develop and characterize a cold-adapted live attenuated equine-2 influenza virus effective as an intranasal vaccine. Methods: 8 ponies approximately 18 months of age. Methods: A wild-type equine-2 virus, A/Equine/Kentucky/1/91 (H3N8), was serially passaged in embryonated chicken eggs at temperatures gradually reduced in a stepwise manner from 34 C to 30 C to 28 C to 26 C. At different passages, infected allantoic fluids were tested for the ability of progeny virus to replicate in Madin-Darby canine kidney (MDCK) cells at 34 C and 39.5 C. Virus clones that replicated at 26 C in eggs and at 3...
Detection of antibodies to the nonstructural protein (NS1) of influenza A virus allows distinction between vaccinated and infected horses.
Veterinary microbiology    June 26, 2001   Volume 82, Issue 2 111-119 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(01)00366-2
Ozaki H, Sugiura T, Sugita S, Imagawa H, Kida H.Antibodies to the nonstructural protein (NS1) of A/equine/Miami/1/63 (H3N8) influenza virus were detected exclusively in the sera of mice experimentally infected with A/Aichi/2/68 (H3N2) and horses infected with A/equine/Kentucky/1/81 (H3N8) or A/equine/La Plata/1/93 (H3N8), but not in those of the animals immunized with the inactivated viruses, by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) using a recombinant NS1 as antigen. The results indicate that the present method is useful for serological diagnosis to distinguish horses infected with equine H3 influenza viruses from those immunized with ...
Safety, efficacy, and immunogenicity of a modified-live equine influenza virus vaccine in ponies after induction of exercise-induced immunosuppression.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    April 11, 2001   Volume 218, Issue 6 900-906 doi: 10.2460/javma.2001.218.900
Lunn DP, Hussey S, Sebing R, Rushlow KE, Radecki SV, Whitaker-Dowling P, Youngner JS, Chambers TM, Holland RE, Horohov DW.To determine safety, efficacy, and immunogenicity of an intranasal cold-adapted modified-live equine influenza virus vaccine administered to ponies following induction of exercise-induced immunosuppression. Methods: Prospective study. Methods: Fifteen 9- to 15-month old ponies that had not had influenza. Methods: Five ponies were vaccinated after 5 days of strenuous exercise on a high-speed treadmill, 5 were vaccinated without undergoing exercise, and 5 were not vaccinated or exercised and served as controls. Three months later, all ponies were challenged by nebulization of homologous equine i...
Antigenic variation among equine H 3 N 8 influenza virus hemagglutinins.
The Japanese journal of veterinary research    March 30, 2001   Volume 48, Issue 4 177-186 
Ozaki H, Shimizu-Nei A, Sugita S, Sugiura T, Imagawa H, Kida H.To provide information on the antigenic variation of the hemagglutinins (HA) among equine H 3 influenza viruses, 26 strains isolated from horses in different areas in the world during the 1963-1996 period were analyzed using a panel of monoclonal antibodies recognizing at least 7 distinct epitopes on the H 3 HA molecule of the prototype strain A/equine/Miami/1/63 (H 3 N 8). The reactivity patterns of the virus strains with the panel indicate that antigenic drift of the HA has occurred with the year of isolation, but less extensively than that of human H 3 N 2 influenza virus isolates, and diff...
Equine influenza vaccine performance: still learning lessons from the field.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    March 13, 2001   Volume 161, Issue 2 107-109 doi: 10.1053/tvjl.2000.0540
Newton JR.No abstract available
Field studies on equine influenza vaccination regimes in thoroughbred foals and yearlings.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    March 13, 2001   Volume 161, Issue 2 174-185 doi: 10.1053/tvjl.2000.0546
Cullinane A, Weld J, Osborne M, Nelly M, Mcbride C, Walsh C.The purpose of these studies was to examine the response of Thoroughbred foals and yearlings to different influenza vaccines and vaccination regimes. The horses' antibody levels against haemagglutinin, an established correlate of protection were measured by haemagglutination inhibition. The first study investigated the extent to which maternal antibodies interfered with the humoral response to a subunit vaccine. The findings suggest that repeat vaccination in the face of maternal antibodies may induce tolerance as defined by serological testing. The second study compared the immune response el...
[Receptor sialylsugar chains as determinants of host range of influenza viruses].
Nihon rinsho. Japanese journal of clinical medicine    February 28, 2001   Volume 58, Issue 11 2206-2210 
Suzuki Y.All types of the hemagglutinin(HA) of human, pig, horse and aq. bird influenza A viruses, recognize sialyl lacto-series type I and II sugar chains(Sialic acid(SA) alpha 2-3(6)Gal beta 1-3(4) GlcNAc beta 1-) in glycoproteins and glycolipids in the target cells as common receptor molecules. Avian and equine influenza viruses preferentially binds the terminal sialic acid alpha 2-3Gal(SA2-3Gal) linkage, while human influenza viruses preferentially bind the SA2-6Gal linkage. SA distribution in animal species influence influenza virus host range. Swine trachea has both receptors for avian influenza ...
Sialic acid species as a determinant of the host range of influenza A viruses.
Journal of virology    November 23, 2000   Volume 74, Issue 24 11825-11831 doi: 10.1128/jvi.74.24.11825-11831.2000
Suzuki Y, Ito T, Suzuki T, Holland RE, Chambers TM, Kiso M, Ishida H, Kawaoka Y.The distribution of sialic acid (SA) species varies among animal species, but the biological role of this variation is largely unknown. Influenza viruses differ in their ability to recognize SA-galactose (Gal) linkages, depending on the animal hosts from which they are isolated. For example, human viruses preferentially recognize SA linked to Gal by the alpha2,6(SAalpha2,6Gal) linkage, while equine viruses favor SAalpha2,3Gal. However, whether a difference in relative abundance of specific SA species (N-acetylneuraminic acid [NeuAc] and N-glycolylneuraminic acid [NeuGc]) among different animal...
Equine influenza in donkeys in the New Forest.
The Veterinary record    November 10, 2000   Volume 147, Issue 14 400 
Cardwell J, Newton R, Wood J, Geraghty B, Ellis R.No abstract available
Modelling the spread of a viral infection in equine populations managed in Thoroughbred racehorse training yards.
Preventive veterinary medicine    October 6, 2000   Volume 47, Issue 1-2 61-77 doi: 10.1016/s0167-5877(00)00161-6
de la Rua-Domenech R, Reid SW, González-Zariquiey AE, Wood JL, Gettinby G.A Monte Carlo model that simulates the management life cycle of a horse population in training on a Thoroughbred flat racing yard (i.e. stable) was developed for computer implementation. Each horse was characterised by several state variables. Discrete events at the horse level were triggered stochastically to reflect uncertainty about some input assumptions and heterogeneity of the horse population in a particular yard. This mathematical model was subsequently used to mimic the spread of equine influenza (EI) within a typical yard following the introduction of one or several infectious horses...
The acute phase protein serum amyloid A (SAA) as an inflammatory marker in equine influenza virus infection.
Acta veterinaria Scandinavica    August 5, 2000   Volume 40, Issue 4 323-333 doi: 10.1186/BF03547012
Hultén C, Sandgren B, Skiöldebrand E, Klingeborn B, Marhaug G, Forsberg M.The acute phase protein serum amyloid A (SAA) has proven potentially useful as an inflammatory marker in the horse, but the knowledge of SAA responses in viral diseases is limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate SAA as a marker for acute equine influenza A2 (H3N8) virus infection. This is a highly contagious, serious condition that inflicts suffering on affected horses and predisposes them to secondary bacterial infections and impaired performance. Seventy horses, suffering from equine influenza, as verified by clinical signs and seroconversion, were sampled in the acute (the first 48 h...
Risk factors for equine influenza serum antibody titres in young thoroughbred racehorses given an inactivated vaccine.
Preventive veterinary medicine    July 6, 2000   Volume 46, Issue 2 129-141 doi: 10.1016/s0167-5877(00)00144-6
Newton JR, Lakhani KH, Wood JL, Baker DJ.Young Thoroughbred racehorses (222 yearlings entering training and 246 2-year-old horses already in training) from eight flat-training yards in Newmarket, UK were used to monitor serological responses to vaccination with an inactivated influenza virus vaccine. Blood samples taken prior to and after vaccination were tested by single radial haemolysis (SRH) to determine antibody titres (expressed as area of haemolysis in mm(2)). Prior to vaccination, yearlings had mean antibody titres (64+/-4 mm(2)) that were approximately half of those of 2-year-olds (115+/-3 mm(2)) and 89% of yearlings and 73%...
Equine influenza vaccine efficacy: the significance of antigenic variation.
Veterinary microbiology    May 9, 2000   Volume 74, Issue 1-2 173-177 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(00)00177-2
Yates P, Mumford JA.To investigate the level of cross-protection induced by equine influenza H3N8 vaccines derived from different lineages, two studies have been carried out with ponies vaccinated with 'American-like' and 'European-like' vaccines and experimentally challenged with a European-like strain. The results demonstrated that equine influenza vaccines clearly protect against challenge with homologous virus if serum antibody titres are sufficiently high. On the other hand, protection is incomplete even when animals vaccinated with heterologous strains have comparative antibody levels. Nevertheless, the pro...
DNA vaccination against influenza viruses: a review with emphasis on equine and swine influenza.
Veterinary microbiology    May 9, 2000   Volume 74, Issue 1-2 149-164 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(00)00175-9
Olsen CW.The influenza virus vaccines that are commercially-available for humans, horses and pigs in the United States are inactivated, whole-virus or subunit vaccines. While these vaccines may decrease the incidence and severity of clinical disease, they do not consistently provide complete protection from virus infection. DNA vaccines are a novel alternative to conventional vaccination strategies, and offer many of the potential benefits of live virus vaccines without their risks. In particular, because immunogens are synthesized de novo within DNA transfected cells, antigen can be presented by MHC c...
[Veterinary service and supervision of equine competitions].
DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift    April 25, 2000   Volume 107, Issue 3 107-109 
Schüle E.Because of the growing interest in animal health and welfare in breeding and sport--specially in the horse--the regulation of the German Riding Association (FN) was updated. The result--the LPO 2000--refer more functions to the veterinarian. At first the permanent presence of the vet is necessary, at second he controls the correct, new installed vaccination against influenza-virus. The functions of vet-check, general horse-control and doping are wide up in number and consultation. For this the veterinarian must decree about much experience and good preparation. The organisations of the veterin...
Equine immunity to viruses.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    April 7, 2000   Volume 16, Issue 1 49-68 
Slater J, Hannant D.The identification of some of the adaptive immune responses to infection with equine viruses has been the first step toward rational immunoprophylactic design. Sufficient knowledge of infection-induced immunity and informed estimates of the requirements for long-term immunity for EIV have now been obtained. Thus, the future for inactivated EIV vaccines is promising now that new adjuvants have been applied to induce cellular immunity and safe methods have been designed to stimulate virus-neutralizing (VN) antibody at mucosal surfaces. Adenoviruses induce circulating VN antibody, the presence of...
Risk factors for disease associated with influenza virus infections during three epidemics in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 25, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 4 545-550 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.216.545
Morley PS, Townsend HG, Bogdan JR, Haines DM.To identify risk factors associated with respiratory tract disease in horses during 3 epidemics caused by influenza virus infections. Methods: Cross-sectional and prospective longitudinal observational studies. Methods: 1,163 horses stabled at a Thoroughbred racetrack. Methods: Investigations were conducted during a 3-year period. An epidemic of respiratory tract disease caused by influenza virus infections was identified in each year. Routine observations and physical examinations were used to classify horses' disease status. Data were analyzed to identify factors associated with development ...
Descriptive epidemiologic study of disease associated with influenza virus infections during three epidemics in horses.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    February 25, 2000   Volume 216, Issue 4 535-544 doi: 10.2460/javma.2000.216.535
Morley PS, Townsend HG, Bogdan JR, Haines DM.To describe 3 epidemics of respiratory tract disease caused by influenza virus infections in a large population of horses. Methods: Cross-sectional and prospective longitudinal observational studies. Methods: All horses stabled at a Thoroughbred racetrack. Methods: During a 3-year period, descriptive information was collected as horses arrived at the racetrack and throughout race meetings. Routine observations and physical examinations were used to classify horses' disease status. Cause of epidemics was established by use of serologic testing and identification of influenza virus in nasal secr...
Immunity to equine influenza: relationship of vaccine-induced antibody in young Thoroughbred racehorses to protection against field infection with influenza A/equine-2 viruses (H3N8).
Equine veterinary journal    February 8, 2000   Volume 32, Issue 1 65-74 doi: 10.2746/042516400777612116
Newton JR, Townsend HG, Wood JL, Sinclair R, Hannant D, Mumford JA.Field outbreaks of influenza that occurred in vaccinated Thoroughbred racehorses in Newmarket in 1995 and 1996 were investigated by nucleoprotein ELISA and serology. Investigations showed that serum levels of vaccine-induced single radial haemolysis (SRH) antibody correlated closely with protective immunity against equine influenza and were consistent with observations made in previous experimental studies using nebulised aerosol challenge. In the second part of this study, antibody levels stimulated by vaccination were investigated to examine probable protection in high risk groups, such as y...
Plasma glutamine status in the equine at rest, during exercise and following viral challenge.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    February 5, 2000   Issue 30 612-616 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1999.tb05295.x
Routledge NB, Harris RC, Harris PA, Naylor JR, Roberts CA.The variation over 24 h of plasma glutamine concentration in nonexercising horses was studied in 3 Thoroughbreds (TB) fed at 1600 h and 0700 h. This indicated a small but regular change associated with feeding. Starting at a mean of 482 mumol/l at 1600 h the concentration increased to 522 mumol/l at 2000 h, falling to 476 mumol/l at 1600 h and increasing again to 525 mumol/l at 2000 h. 'Normal' values were established in 19 part-bred TB horses, lacking clinical signs or remarkable pathology and in light training, by sampling weekly at 1000 h over a 10 week period. The mean concentration was 49...
‘Cross-protection’ and ‘cross-reaction’ with equine influenza vaccines.
The Veterinary record    January 5, 2000   Volume 145, Issue 22 647 
Newton JR, Wood JL, Jessett D, Yates PJ, Mumford JA.No abstract available
Equine influenza in the United Kingdom in 1998.
The Veterinary record    November 27, 1999   Volume 145, Issue 16 449-452 doi: 10.1136/vr.145.16.449
Newton JR, Verheyen K, Wood JL, Yates PJ, Mumford JA.In 1998, equine influenza was diagnosed by serology and nucleoprotein enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay as the cause of acute respiratory disease in vaccinated and unvaccinated horses in the UK. The signs were generally milder in vaccinated horses and completely susceptible animals showed the most severe signs, including pyrexia, inappetence, coughing, mucopurulent nasal discharge and secondary bacterial pneumonia. In a detailed investigation of an outbreak among 52 vaccinated thoroughbreds in a flat racing yard, more than 60 per cent of the horses seroconverted on the evidence of paired serum...
BERNA: a century of immunobiological innovation.
Vaccine    October 3, 1999   Volume 17 Suppl 2 S1-S5 doi: 10.1016/s0264-410x(99)00228-5
Cryz SJ.At the time the Swiss Serum and Vaccine Institute Berne (BERNA) was found in 1898, few vaccines or immune globulins were available. This short list included vaccines against cholera, typhoid fever, plague, smallpox and rabies and equine anti-tetanus and diphtheria immune globulins. Furthermore, their use was restricted due to limited production capacity, uncertainty regarding safety and no public health infrastructure to promote their utilization. Today, safe and effective vaccines exist for more than 30 infectious diseases while human hyperimmune globulins exist to treat or prevent rabies, te...
A PCR based method for the identification of equine influenza virus from clinical samples.
Veterinary microbiology    July 27, 1999   Volume 67, Issue 3 161-174 doi: 10.1016/s0378-1135(99)00041-3
Oxburgh L, Hagström A.In this paper we describe the development of a nested RT-PCR assay for the rapid diagnosis and characterisation of influenza virus directly from clinical specimens. Viral RNA is extracted from nasal swabs by the guanidine thiocyanate extraction method, and subsequently reverse transcribed. The complementary DNA is then used as template in a nested PCR reaction. Primers designed for use in this assay are specific for three templates; (1) the nucleoprotein (NP) gene, (2) the haemagglutinin gene of the H7N7 equine influenza virus (A1), and (3) the haemagglutinin gene of the H3N8 equine influenza ...
Pharmacokinetics and therapeutic efficacy of rimantadine in horses experimentally infected with influenza virus A2.
American journal of veterinary research    July 17, 1999   Volume 60, Issue 7 888-894 
Rees WA, Harkins JD, Lu M, Holland RE, Lehner AF, Tobin T, Chambers TM.To determine pharmacokinetics of single and multiple doses of rimantadine hydrochloride in horses and to evaluate prophylactic efficacy of rimantadine in influenza virus-infected horses. Methods: 5 clinically normal horses and 8 horses seronegative to influenza A. Methods: Horses were given rimantadine (7 mg/kg of body weight, i.v., once; 15 mg/kg, p.o., once; 30 mg/kg, p.o., once; and 30 mg/kg, p.o., q 12 h for 4 days) to determine disposition kinetics. Efficacy in induced infections was determined in horses seronegative to influenza virus A2. Rimantadine was administered (30 mg/kg, p.o., q 1...
Antibody responses to DNA vaccination of horses using the influenza virus hemagglutinin gene.
Vaccine    July 14, 1999   Volume 17, Issue 18 2245-2258 doi: 10.1016/s0264-410x(98)00496-4
Lunn DP, Soboll G, Schram BR, Quass J, McGregor MW, Drape RJ, Macklin MD, McCabe DE, Swain WF, Olsen CW.Equine influenza virus infection remains one of the most important infectious diseases of the horse, yet current vaccines offer only limited protection. The equine immune response to natural influenza virus infection results in long-term protective immunity, and is characterized by mucosal IgA and serum IgGa and IgGb antibody responses. DNA vaccination offers a radical alternative to conventional vaccines, with the potential to generate the same protective immune responses seen following viral infection. Antigen-specific antibody isotype responses in serum and mucosal secretions were studied i...
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