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Topic:Zoonotic Diseases

Zoonotic diseases are infectious diseases that can be transmitted between animals and humans, with horses acting as potential hosts or vectors. These diseases can result from various pathogens, including bacteria, viruses, parasites, and fungi, which can be transmitted through direct contact, vectors like mosquitoes, or environmental exposure. Horses can carry zoonotic pathogens such as Salmonella, West Nile Virus, and Leptospira, posing health risks to humans, particularly those working closely with equines. Understanding the transmission dynamics, prevention strategies, and control measures helps safeguard both equine and human health. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and management of zoonotic diseases associated with horses.
Influenza in animals.
Advances in veterinary science    January 1, 1968   Volume 12 285-336 
McQueen JL, Steele JH, Robinson RQ.No abstract available
[Epizootiology of equine plague in Spain].
Bulletin - Office international des epizooties    May 1, 1967   Volume 68, Issue 1 705-714 
Diaz Montilla R, Martí P.No abstract available
[Epizootiology, epidemiology and control of bovine, porcine and equine salmonellosis].
Bulletin - Office international des epizooties    May 1, 1967   Volume 68, Issue 1 153-195 
Castagnoli B, Bellani L.No abstract available
Epidemio-epizootiology and control of salmonellosis of sheep, equine animals and pigs in India.
Bulletin - Office international des epizooties    May 1, 1967   Volume 68, Issue 1 251-253 
Bhattacharya P.No abstract available
The epidemiology and control of salmonellosis in equines, cattle and pigs.
Bulletin - Office international des epizooties    May 1, 1967   Volume 68, Issue 1 231-239 
Field HI.No abstract available
[On the epizootiology of leptospirosis in animals].
Veterinariia    April 1, 1967   Volume 44, Issue 4 35-38 
Dubakin NI, Vishniakov IF, Etleshev GS, Varlamov IS.No abstract available
Salmonellosis.
Advances in veterinary science    January 1, 1967   Volume 11 1-63 
Edwards PR, Galton MM.No abstract available
[Rabies in animals].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    July 1, 1966   Volume 108, Issue 7 388-396 
Brion A.No abstract available
Serologic survey for neutralizing antibodies to eastern equine and western equine encephalitis viruses in man, wild birds and swine in southern Mexico during 1961.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    March 1, 1966   Volume 15, Issue 2 211-218 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1966.15.211
Scherer WF, Sainz CC, De Mucha Macias J, Rubio-Brito R, Miura T, Dickerman RW, Warner DW, Dyer M.No abstract available
Symposium: the smallest stowaways. II. The arboviruses.
The Veterinary record    November 27, 1965   Volume 77, Issue 48 1428-1431 doi: 10.1136/vr.77.48.1428
Haig DA.No abstract available
[The result of animal inspection for leptospirosis].
Veterinariia    November 1, 1965   Volume 42, Issue 11 39-40 
Mezhennyĭ AM.No abstract available
[Leptospirosis in animals in the Lithuanian SSR].
Veterinariia    October 1, 1965   Volume 42, Issue 10 32-34 
Markiavichus A, Chapas B.No abstract available
[Serologic research on diffusion of leptospirosis among horses].
Giornale di malattie infettive e parassitarie    September 1, 1965   Volume 17, Issue 9 510 
De Stefano G, Ferrari A, Lombardo G.No abstract available
Personal experience of onchocerciasis in Central America, Africa and the British Isles, with a note on O. cervicalis in horses.
Transactions of the ophthalmological societies of the United Kingdom    January 1, 1964   Volume 84 371-406 
Choyce DP.No abstract available
An Outbreak of Type A(2) Influenza Among Horses.
Canadian journal of comparative medicine and veterinary science    November 1, 1963   Volume 27, Issue 11 257-260 
Marois P, Pavilanis V, Boudreault A, Di Franco E.The clinical diagnosis of equine influenza was first based on the spectacular contagiousness of the disease, the general clinical resemblances to human influenza and the almost complete absence of complications usually observed in infectious viral arteritis, viral rhinopneumonitis or in other respiratory infections of the horses. The specific viral etiology of the epizootic was ascertained through the isolation of a type A influenza virus and further substantiated by evaluation of the immunological response of the sick horses, as demonstrated by complement fixation and hemagglutination-inhibit...
[Research on the Incidence of Anti-Ornithosis Antibodies in Horses and Men].
Studii si cercetari de inframicrobiologie    January 1, 1963   Volume 14 131-135 
SARATEANU D, SURDAN C, SORODOC G, ANAGNOSTE B, STEFANESCU I.No abstract available
[Equine encephalomyelitis in Conchas, Sao Paulo, Brazil: incidence of hemagglutination-inhibiting antibodies in humans and horses].
Revista do Instituto de Medicina Tropical de Sao Paulo    May 1, 1962   Volume 4 149-151 
PEREIRA OA, MOREIRA LP, ROJAS E.No abstract available
[Existence of an endemic focus of rhinosporidiosis in the province of Chaco. II. Study of new cases, human and equine].
Prensa medica argentina    May 19, 1961   Volume 48 1470-1476 
NINO FL, FREIRE RS, SERRAL O.No abstract available
Influenza in swine and horses.
The American review of respiratory disease    February 1, 1961   Volume 83(2)Pt 2 47 doi: 10.1164/arrd.1961.83.2P2.47
SCHAEFFER M, ROBINSON RQ.No abstract available
African horse-sickness.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1961   Volume 138 15-16 
MAURER FD.No abstract available
Western equine encephalitis.
Rocky Mountain medical journal    April 1, 1959   Volume 56, Issue 4 68 
COPPS SC, GIDDINGS LE.No abstract available
Possible role of horses in the epidemiology of toxoplasmosis. (Results of examination of horses and other toxoplasmosis).
Journal of hygiene, epidemiology, microbiology, and immunology    January 1, 1959   Volume 3 229-231 
SEEMAN J.No abstract available
[Studies on the interactions between bacteria and ascarides in intestinal zoonoses of hogs and horses]. EMANUILOFF I.No abstract available
A study on a Q fever focus due to horses as a source of infection.
Rumanian medical review    April 1, 1958   Volume 2, Issue 2 20-21 
ZARNEA G, VASILIU V, VOICULESCU R, ISRAEL H, PEREDERY S, TUNARU C, SZEGLI L, POPESCU F, IONESCU H.No abstract available
[Possibility of survival of Western type of North American equine encephalomyelitis virus in Ixodus ricinus L].
Ceskoslovenska epidemiologie, mikrobiologie, imunologie    March 1, 1958   Volume 7, Issue 2 102-105 
BENDA R, DANES L.No abstract available
Near-Eastern equine encephalomyelitis.
Nature    March 16, 1957   Volume 179, Issue 4559 584-585 doi: 10.1038/179584a0
DAUBNEY R, MAHLAU EA.No abstract available
Transmission of eastern equine encephalitis to horses by Aedes sollicitans mosquitoes.
The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene    September 1, 1956   Volume 5, Issue 5 802-808 doi: 10.4269/ajtmh.1956.5.802
CHAMBERLAIN RW, KISSLING RE, STAMM DD, SUDIA WD.No abstract available
Incidence of leptospira in horses; a laboratory report.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 15, 1956   Volume 128, Issue 12 601 
SCHLICHTING M, SANDERS RH.No abstract available
Immunological relationship between infectious cough in horses and human influenza A.
Archiv fur die gesamte Virusforschung    January 1, 1956   Volume 7, Issue 1 120-124 doi: 10.1007/BF01253897
ESPMARK A, HELLER L, VIRIDEN P.No abstract available
Studies on the North American arthropod-Borne encephalitides. VIII. Equine encephalitis studies in Louisiana.
American journal of hygiene    November 1, 1955   Volume 62, Issue 3 233-254 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a119776
KISSLING RE, CHAMBERLAIN RW, NELSON DB, STAMM DD.No abstract available