Horse News & Views - March 2007
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Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs
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Ontario Association
of
Equine Practitioners
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- Dr. David Powell of the Maxwell H. Gluck Equine Research Centre,
University of Kentucky, reminds horse owners to take a horse's temperature
twice daily if they suspect their horse has come in contact with a
horse with an infectious disease. It is a simple means of determining
an animal's health status. (Equine Disease Quarterly, April 2006).
- The rectal temperature of horses typically rises 12 - 24 hours prior
to the onset of clinical signs of a disease. Temperature taking is
a useful procedure regardless of the disease. The onset of signs after
exposure is variable and depends on immune status from either previous
exposure or vaccination and challenge dose. Horses exposed to the
neurological form of equine herpes (EHV-1), other respiratory viruses
or strangles should have their rectal temperature monitored for at
least the time equal to or, preferably, twice the maximum incubation
period of the disease. This will provide an early warning sign of
pending or overt disease and allow for isolation of the affected horse(s).
The incubation period for most of the bacterial and viral agents varies
from 3 - 14 days (influenza - 1 - 10 days; strangles - 3 - 14 days;
EHV-1 - 2 - 10 days).
- At speaking engagements throughout Ontario, horse owners ask whether
it is still worthwhile to vaccinate their horses for West Nile virus
(WNv). Looking at surveillance data in Ontario from 2005 (5 cases)
and 2006 (3 cases) and in Kentucky (9 cases) from 2005, the horses
identified with WNv had either not been vaccinated against WNv or
no information was available on their vaccination status. No WNv cases
were detected in horses known to have been properly vaccinated with
a WNv vaccine. WNv vaccine is a recommended core vaccine for horses
in Ontario as well as many areas of North America.
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