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Topic:Public Health

The topic of Public Health and horses encompasses the study of interactions between equine populations and human health systems. It involves examining the transmission of zoonotic diseases, which are diseases that can be transferred between animals and humans, as well as the role of horses in the epidemiology of such diseases. This field also considers the impact of equine-related activities on public health, including injuries and environmental effects. Research in this area often explores preventive measures, management strategies, and policies to mitigate health risks associated with horses. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that investigate the intersection of equine and public health, focusing on disease transmission, risk assessment, and health management strategies.
Occupational respiratory health of New Zealand horse trainers.
International archives of occupational and environmental health    September 26, 2006   Volume 80, Issue 4 335-341 doi: 10.1007/s00420-006-0141-4
Gallagher LM, Crane J, Fitzharris P, Bates MN.To confirm that working with horses is an occupational respiratory hazard and observed associations are not attributable to confounding. Methods: A postal survey of the respiratory health of 659 horse trainers and a comparison group of 506 vegetable growers was conducted. Data were analysed using logistic regression. Results: Relative to vegetable growers, horse trainers reported higher rates of chronic bronchitis [odds ratio (OR) = 6.8, 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.2-21.4] and organic dust toxic syndrome/farmers' lung (ODTS/FL) (OR = 3.5, 95% CI: 1.8-6.8). Grinding oats, spreading hay, and...
Ethnobotany of Montseny biosphere reserve (Catalonia, Iberian Peninsula): plants used in veterinary medicine.
Journal of ethnopharmacology    September 23, 2006   Volume 110, Issue 1 130-147 doi: 10.1016/j.jep.2006.09.016
Bonet MA, Vallès J.The present paper deals with plants used in veterinary medicine in Montseny. An ethnobotanical survey was carried out in the Montseny massif, which is situated in north-east Catalonia (Iberian Peninsula), covers 826 km(2) and has a population of 80,000. The information was obtained through 120 ethnobotanical interviews to 180 informants. Out of 584 species reported, 351 are claimed to be used in the health field (human and veterinary medicine), 280 in human and animal food and 236 have another kind of popular use. Medicinal species represent around 16.5% of Montseny's vascular flora. In a prev...
[Epidemiological aspects of human and animal rabies in the urban area of Bamako, Mali].
Bulletin de la Societe de pathologie exotique (1990)    September 21, 2006   Volume 99, Issue 3 183-186 
Dao S, Abdillahi AM, Bougoudogo F, Toure K, Simbe C.The district of Bamako is the political and economical capital city of Mali with 1,800,000 inhabitants. The goal of the present retrospective study was to determine the frequency of animal bites, human and animal rabies on the one hand and to determine the frequency and the nature of mad animals on the other hand from January 2000 to December 2003 (4 years). To achieve this goal, we have analysed registers and documents related to rabies in the department of prevention and fight against diseases, the central veterinary laboratory, and also at the lazaret clinic involved in caring for human rab...
Microbial source tracking by DNA sequence analysis of the Escherichia coli malate dehydrogenase gene.
Journal of microbiological methods    September 14, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 3 507-526 doi: 10.1016/j.mimet.2006.04.026
Ivanetich KM, Hsu PH, Wunderlich KM, Messenger E, Walkup WG, Scott TM, Lukasik J, Davis J.Criteria for sub-typing of microbial organisms by DNA sequencing proposed by Olive and Bean were applied to several genes in Escherichia coli to identify targets for the development of microbial source tracking assays. Based on the aforementioned criteria, the icd (isocitrate dehydrogenase), and putP (proline permease) genes were excluded as potential targets due to their high rates of horizontal gene transfer; the rrs (16S rRNA) gene was excluded as a target due to the presence of multiple gene copies, with different sequences in a single genome. Based on the above criteria, the mdh (malate d...
Contamination of surface run-off water and soil in two horse paddocks.
Bioresource technology    September 1, 2006   Volume 98, Issue 9 1762-1766 doi: 10.1016/j.biortech.2006.07.032
Airaksinen S, Heiskanen ML, Heinonen-Tanski H.Increased stabling of horses near to cities has led to interest in the environmental effects of paddocks. In this study, the contamination of horse paddocks was examined by determining the nutrient and micro-organism contents in the surface run-off waters and the electrical conductivity, pH and phosphorus, potassium and nitrate contents of top soils. Two open-stable paddocks were studied, one cleaned and the other left uncleaned, with a stocking density of 37.5 animalsha(-1) in both. The feeding and drinking places were the most contaminated areas of both paddocks. In spring, after seven month...
Diversity and distribution of Escherichia coli genotypes and antibiotic resistance phenotypes in feces of humans, cattle, and horses.
Applied and environmental microbiology    September 1, 2006   Volume 72, Issue 11 6914-6922 doi: 10.1128/AEM.01029-06
Anderson MA, Whitlock JE, Harwood VJ.Escherichia coli is the most completely characterized prokaryotic model organism and one of the dominant indicator organisms for food and water quality testing, yet comparatively little is known about the structure of E. coli populations in their various hosts. The diversities of E. coli populations isolated from the feces of three host species (human, cow, and horse) were compared by two subtyping methods: ribotyping (using HindIII) and antibiotic resistance analysis (ARA). The sampling effort required to obtain a representative sample differed by host species, as E. coli diversity was consis...
Laboratory diagnosis of equine rabies and its implications for human postexposure prophylaxis.
Journal of virological methods    August 21, 2006   Volume 138, Issue 1-2 1-9 doi: 10.1016/j.jviromet.2006.07.005
Carrieri ML, Peixoto ZM, Paciencia ML, Kotait I, Germano PM.Laboratory diagnosis is essential to confirm suspected cases of equine rabies and to determine the medical care needed for human postexposure antirabies prophylaxis. Equine rabies transmitted by the vampire bat, Desmodus rotundus, has increased gradually in the State of São Paulo. The present study has several objectives, the most important being the evaluation of fluorescent antibody test (FAT) and virus-isolation laboratory tests performed with different equine nervous system tissues (cortical, hippocampus, cerebellar, brainstem and cervical medullar) to determine the tissue for which the t...
[Frequent deworming in horses; it usually does not do any good, but it often harms].
Tijdschrift voor diergeneeskunde    August 19, 2006   Volume 131, Issue 14-15 524-530 
Eysker M, van Doorn DC, Lems SN, Weteling A, Ploeger HW.Due to excessive and inappropriate use of dewormers anthelmintic resistance has developed as a significant problem in horse parasites in the Netherlands. Since it is unlikely that new classes of anthelmintics against horse nematodes will be introduced in the near future, it is important to use the present drugs wisely. Veterinarians should advice horse owners about worm control programs with a more targeted approach. The number of anthelmintic treatments should be reduced and, through selective anthelmintic treatments, further development of anthelmintic resistance should be delayed. Preferabl...
Limb fractures more common in French than British jockeys.
Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987)    August 16, 2006   Volume 20, Issue 49 19 doi: 10.7748/ns.20.49.19.s23
French jockeys suffer more severe injuries when they fall off their horses than their British counterparts. While it has been shown that jockeys suffer high rates of fatal and non-fatal injuries, little is known about differences in injury rates between countries. To investigate this, researchers from Australia, France and the UK used prospectively collected data on the rates of fatal and non-fatal injuries in flat and jump jockeys in France and compared them with data from the UK.
Equine disease surveillance, January to March 2006.
The Veterinary record    August 11, 2006   Volume 159, Issue 4 99-102 doi: 10.1136/vr.159.4.99
No abstract available
Pilot study to evaluate 3 hygiene protocols on the reduction of bacterial load on the hands of veterinary staff performing routine equine physical examinations.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    August 11, 2006   Volume 47, Issue 7 671-676 
Traub-Dargatz JL, Weese JS, Rousseau JD, Dunowska M, Morley PS, Dargatz DA.Reduction factors (RFs) for bacterial counts on examiners' hands were compared when performing a standardized equine physical examination, followed by the use of one of 3 hand-hygiene protocols (washing with soap, ethanol gel application, and chlorohexidine-ethanol application). The mean RFs were 1.29 log10 and 1.44 log10 at 2 study sites for the alcohol-gel (62% ethyl alcohol active ingredient) protocols and 1.47 log10 and 1.94 log10 at 2 study sites for the chlorhexidine-alcohol (61% ethyl alcohol plus 1% chlorhexidine active ingredients) protocols, respectively. The RFs were significantly d...
Distribution and characterization of Borrelia burgdorferi isolates from Ixodes scapularis and presence in mammalian hosts in Ontario, Canada.
Journal of medical entomology    August 9, 2006   Volume 43, Issue 4 762-773 doi: 10.1603/0022-2585(2006)43[762:DACOBB]2.0.CO;2
Morshed MG, Scott JD, Fernando K, Geddes G, McNabb A, Mak S, Durden LA.The blacklegged tick, Ixodes scapularis Say (Acari: Ixodidae), has a wide geographical distribution in Ontario, Canada, with a detected range extending at least as far north as the 50th parallel. Our data of 591 adult I. scapularis submissions collected from domestic animals (canines, felines, and equines) and humans during a 10-yr period (1993-2002) discloses a monthly questing activity in Ontario that peaks in May and October. The Lyme disease spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi Johnson, Schmidt, Hyde, Steigerwalt & Brenner was detected in 12.9% of I. scapularis adults collected from domesti...
Epizootic lymphangitis: the impact on subsistence economies and animal welfare.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    August 8, 2006   Volume 172, Issue 3 402-404 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2006.06.003
Jones K.No abstract available
Seroepidemiological evidence for the possible presence of Babesia (Theileria) equi and Babesia caballi infections in donkeys in western Xinjiang, China.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    August 8, 2006   Volume 68, Issue 7 753-755 doi: 10.1292/jvms.68.753
Chahan B, Zhang S, Seo JY, Nakamura C, Zhang G, Bannai H, Jian Z, Inokuma H, Tuchiya K, Sato Y, Kabeya H, Maruyama S, Mikami T, Xuan X.The prevalence of Babesia (Theileria) equi and B. caballi infections in donkeys in western Xinjiang China was investigated. In total, 93 serum samples were randomly taken from donkeys in the Kashi and Ili areas, and examined for B. equi and B. caballi infections by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays using recombinant antigens. Of the 93 samples, 9 (9.6%) and 36 (38.7%) samples were positive for B. equi infection and B. caballi infection, respectively. In addition, 2 (2.2%) samples were positive for both B. equi and B. caballi infections. These results indicate that equine babesiosis might be e...
Rhodococcus equi in the soil environment of horses in Inner Mongolia, China.
The Journal of veterinary medical science    August 8, 2006   Volume 68, Issue 7 739-742 doi: 10.1292/jvms.68.739
Takai S, Zhuang D, Huo XW, Madarame H, Gao MH, Tan ZT, Gao SC, Yan LJ, Guo CM, Zhou XF, Hatori F, Sasaki Y, Kakuda T, Tsubaki S.Little is known about the distribution of Rhodococcus equi in the soil environment of native horses in China. One hundred and eight soil samples were collected from native-horse farms in the Hulun Beier grasslands of eastern Mongolia, the Xilin Goler grasslands of southern Mongolia, and Tongliao City in Inner Mongolia, China. The isolation rates of R. equi from soil samples from the Hulun Beier and Xilin Goler grasslands ranged from 25.9% to 30.0%. In contrast, isolation rates from soil samples from Tongliao City were as high as 82.3% and the mean number of R. equi in soil samples from Tonglia...
[The influence of diptera on the domestic animals].
Wiadomosci parazytologiczne    August 5, 2006   Volume 45, Issue 3 323-326 
Romaniuk K.The Diptera attacked domestic animals in Poland are: Simuliidae, Culicidae, Tabanidae, Gasterophilidae, Hypoder-matidae and Muscidae. The insect assail the crazing animals, mostly during sunny day dna at close of day. Lack of effective repelents and also difficulties with their usage, makes it impossible to complete extermination of parasitic insects in the environment. It is posible to effectively fight against Hypoderma bovis and Gasterophilus spp.
Principles of antimicrobial therapy: what should we be using?
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 3, 2006   Volume 22, Issue 2 279-vii doi: 10.1016/j.cveq.2006.04.004
Southwood LL.Although the use of antimicrobials has had an insurmountable impact on preventing patient morbidity and mortality, problems with antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial-induced diarrhea are becoming more apparent in human and veterinary medicine. The mortality associated with nosocomial infection with antimicrobial-resistant bacteria in human patients is alarming. Similarly, in veterinary medicine, the morbidity and high cost of treatment of patients with postoperative infection, for example, are concerns. Specifically in equine medicine, the high morbidity and mortality associated with ant...
Correlates between human lung injury after particle exposure and recurrent airway obstruction in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    July 27, 2006   Volume 38, Issue 4 362-367 doi: 10.2746/042516406777749272
Ghio AJ, Mazan MR, Hoffman AM, Robinson NE.No abstract available
Equine adenovirus 1 infection of hospitalised and healthy foals and horses.
Equine veterinary journal    July 27, 2006   Volume 38, Issue 4 379-381 doi: 10.2746/042516406777749173
Bell SA, Leclere M, Gardner IA, Maclachlan NJ.No abstract available
Characteristics of an outbreak of West Nile virus encephalomyelitis in a previously uninfected population of horses.
Veterinary microbiology    July 26, 2006   Volume 118, Issue 3-4 255-259 doi: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2006.07.016
Ward MP, Schuermann JA, Highfield LD, Murray KO.Equine West Nile virus (WNV) encephalomyelitis cases - based on clinical signs and ELISA serology test results - reported to Texas disease control authorities during 2002 were analyzed to provide insights into the epidemiology of the disease within a previously disease-free population. The epidemic occurred between June 27 and December 17 (peaking in early October) and 1,698 cases were reported. Three distinct epidemic phases were identified, occurring mostly in southeast, northwest and then central Texas. Significant (P<0.05) disease clusters were identified in northwest and northern Texas. M...
Use of accelerating solvent extraction for detecting non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in horse feces.
Journal of analytical toxicology    July 15, 2006   Volume 30, Issue 5 323-330 doi: 10.1093/jat/30.5.323
Popot MA, Donval A, Bonnaire Y, Huau J.Feces are a possible medium to be used for horse doping control. Efficient methods for detecting drugs in feces collected from various animals are routinely applied in institutes of food safety in Belgium. We have already tested whether they are applicable to horse feces. In this report, accelerated solvent extraction (ASE), an efficient method for extracting compounds from solid material, has been tested. ASE has been used to replace the diethyl ether liquid-liquid extraction step present in the method initially set up. This technique has been optimized for detecting several non-steroidal ant...
Determination of zearalenone and its metabolites in urine, plasma and faeces of horses by HPLC-APCI-MS.
Journal of chromatography. B, Analytical technologies in the biomedical and life sciences    July 7, 2006   Volume 843, Issue 2 252-261 doi: 10.1016/j.jchromb.2006.06.012
Songsermsakul P, Sontag G, Cichna-Markl M, Zentek J, Razzazi-Fazeli E.The paper describes a method for the sensitive and selective determination of zearalenone and its metabolites in urine, plasma and faeces of horses by high performance liquid chromatography and atmospheric pressure chemical ionisation (APCI) mass spectrometry (MS). While only one step sample clean-up by an immunoaffinity column (IAC) was sufficient for plasma samples, urine and faeces samples had to be prepared by a combination of a solid-phase extraction (SPE) and an immunoaffinity column. The method allows the simultaneous determination of zearalenone and all of its metabolites; alpha-zearal...
Getting a grip on strangles: recent progress towards improved diagnostics and vaccines.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    July 3, 2006   Volume 173, Issue 3 492-501 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2006.05.011
Waller AS, Jolley KA.'Strangles', caused by infection with the bacterium Streptococcus equi, remains one of the most commonly diagnosed and important infectious diseases of horses world-wide. This review discusses the diagnosis and pathogenesis of strangles with particular attention to the significance of persistent infections in disease transmission and the rapid progress now being made towards the development of effective preventative vaccines. It is now possible combine recent sequence data from the N-terminal region of the SeM protein and reassign the SeM alleles using the on-line database http://pubmlst.org/s...
Eastern equine encephalitis–New Hampshire and Massachusetts, August-September 2005.
MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report    July 1, 2006   Volume 55, Issue 25 697-700 
During August-September 2005, the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services reported seven cases of human eastern equine encephalitis virus (EEEV) disease, the first laboratory-confirmed, locally acquired cases of human EEEV disease reported from New Hampshire in 41 years of national surveillance. Also during August--September 2005, the Massachusetts Department of Public Health reported four cases of human EEEV disease, five times the annual average of 0.8 cases reported from Massachusetts during the preceding 10 years. Four of the 11 patients from New Hampshire and Massachusetts d...
Equine trypanosomosis in the Central River Division of The Gambia: a study of veterinary gate-clinic consultation records.
Preventive veterinary medicine    June 30, 2006   Volume 75, Issue 3-4 152-162 doi: 10.1016/j.prevetmed.2005.11.009
Dhollander S, Jallow A, Mbodge K, Kora S, Sanneh M, Gaye M, Bos J, Leak S, Berkvens D, Geerts S.The objective of this study was to provide epidemiological information of equine trypanosomosis in the Central River Division (CRD) of The Gambia. Therefore, 2285 consultations records of equines, admitted in a gate-clinic at Sololo in CRD, were studied retrospectively. The data were recorded in the period between September 1995 and July 2002 and comprised consultations of 2113 horses and 172 donkeys. 'Trypanosome infection' was the most frequently diagnosed condition and accounted for 61% of the cases. Horses were more frequently diagnosed with trypanosome infections than donkeys (p1 year) we...
Syndromic surveillance in the Netherlands for the early detection of West Nile virus epidemics.
Vector borne and zoonotic diseases (Larchmont, N.Y.)    June 27, 2006   Volume 6, Issue 2 161-169 doi: 10.1089/vbz.2006.6.161
Rockx B, van Asten L, van den Wijngaard C, Godeke GJ, Goehring L, Vennema H, van der Avoort H, van Pelt W, Koopmans M.West Nile virus (WNV) is an arthropod-borne flavivirus that is endemic in Africa, Europe, and Eastern Asia. The recent introduction and rapid dissemination of the virus in the United States as well as an increase in WNV outbreaks in Europe, has raised concerns for its spread in Europe. A surveillance system was developed to allow timely detection of an introduction of WNV infections in The Netherlands. This program focuses on cases presenting with neurological disease and includes the monitoring of hospital discharge diagnoses, trends in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) diagnostic requests, laborator...
Epidemiology of equine histoplasmosis (epizootic lymphangitis) in carthorses in Ethiopia.
Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)    June 15, 2006   Volume 172, Issue 1 160-165 doi: 10.1016/j.tvjl.2005.02.025
Ameni G.A study was conducted between January 2003 and June 2004 on 19,082 carthorses in 28 towns in Ethiopia to investigate the epidemiology of equine histoplasmosis (EH). Clinical and microscopic examinations were used and an overall prevalence of 18.8% (3579/19082) was recorded. Statistically significant (P<0.001) differences was observed in the average prevalence with high, medium, and low prevalence categories. The highest prevalence (39%) was recorded at Mojo while the lowest (0.0%) was recorded at five towns, namely, Agaro, Bokoji, Debre Berhan, Dinsho, and Sagure. The prevalence of EH was n...
Spread of equine West Nile virus encephalomyelitis during the 2002 Texas epidemic.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    June 9, 2006   Volume 74, Issue 6 1090-1095 
Ward MP.Using reports of clinical West Nile virus (WNV) encephalomyelitis in Texas equids during 2002, the distribution of disease was analyzed using cluster statistics and spatial modeling to develop hypotheses of disease spread during the first year of its detection. Significant (P < 0.05) clusters of cases reported early during the outbreak were identified in east, northcentral, and north Texas, and significant (P < 0.05) clusters late during the outbreak were detected in central, south, and west Texas. Two counties on the south Texas coast first reported disease significantly (P < 0.05) e...
Horse-related injuries and deaths in North Carolina, 1995-1999.
North Carolina medical journal    June 7, 2006   Volume 67, Issue 2 161-162 
Bixby-Hammett DM.No abstract available
Environmental and ecological determinants of West Nile virus occurrence in horses in North Dakota, 2002.
Epidemiology and infection    June 6, 2006   Volume 135, Issue 1 57-66 doi: 10.1017/S0950268806006662
Mongoh MN, Khaitsa ML, Dyer NW.West Nile virus (WNV) outbreak in North Dakota in 2002 included over 569 horse cases, clustered mainly in the eastern and northeastern parts of the state. The pattern of occurrence observed suggested existence of specific environmental and ecological factors that increased the risk for infection and illness in those locations. We developed a predictive model with factors that explained the pattern of WNV occurrence observed. Results indicated that surface elevation, temperature, precipitation, reported WNV-positive birds, reported WNV-positive humans, and reported WNV-positive mosquitoes were ...