By
Laura Whelan MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Although Equine Infectious Anemia is not a new
threat to horse health, its potentially deadly consequences
and lack of a cure make it an especially harmful
risk. "EIA
has commanded a great deal of attention over the years,"
said Dr. Stanley Robertson, Mississippi State University
Extension Service veterinarian. "This disease has no
vaccine, treatment or cure, and it is often difficult to
differentiate it from other fever producing diseases, like
anthrax, influenza and equine encephalitis." Robertson
said EIA is most frequently transmitted between horses by
large biting insects like horseflies and deerflies. EIA is a
retrovirus, producing DNA that becomes part of the genetic
makeup of infected cells. As biting flies travel from one
horse to another, they transmit the virus through any
infected material they picked up from an EIA carrier. The
disease can be diagnosed by the Coggins test, which
identifies antibodies specific to the EIA virus. In
the acute form of EIA, horses can die within two to three
weeks. "The
acute form of the disease is the most damaging and the most
difficult to diagnose because the signs appear rapidly, and
often an elevated body temperature is the only symptom,"
Robertson said. The
disease also can appear in chronic form, meaning the horse
survives the first acute bout, but may develop recurring
clinical disease. Symptoms include high fever, hemorrhages
on the mucous membranes, depression, weight loss, swelling
of the legs and underbody surfaces, and anemia. However,
Robertson said most horses with EIA show few
symptoms. "The
majority of infected horses are unapparent carriers that
show no overt clinical abnormalities as a result of
infection," he said. "They survive as reservoirs of the
infection for extended periods and are considered virus
carriers for life." Veterinarians
or horse owners suspecting EIA in an animal should contact
state or federal animal health authorities immediately.
Horse
owners can take several precautions to reduce the risk of
infection. Robertson suggested using disposable syringes and
needles, cleaning and sterilizing all instruments thoroughly
after each use, and keeping stables sanitary by removing
debris and manure promptly. Control insects with the help of
a veterinarian and avoid placing horses in favorable insect
habitats. Robertson
said it is important not to intermingle infected and healthy
animals or breed EIA-positive horses. Isolate all new horses
until they have been tested, and owners must comply with
state laws requiring certification of negative EIA
tests. Robertson
said one horse in Mississippi is known to have tested
positive for EIA this year; in 2002, 11 horses tested
positive; and in 2001, 13 horses tested positive.
Approximately 40,000 horses have been tested for EIA each
year in Mississippi for the last three years. The
impact of EIA on horse owners is greater than just dealing
with the disease itself; they also must comply with EIA
regulations regarding testing and the disposal of positive
animals. According to the EIA Law (House Bill 539), all
horses in the state where the public participates in equine
activities must be accompanied by the original copy of a
current negative EIA test. Any horses moving within the
state or sold at public or private sales also must have
proof of a negative test. "EIA
is a serious problem because there is no vaccine or
treatment for the disease. If an animal tests positive on
the Coggins test, the owner has two options -- the horse is
either quarantined or destroyed," Robertson said. Since
1978, 92 percent of positive EIA tests in the United States
have originated from a region known as the "hot zone"
because of the warm environmental conditions that are ideal
for insects that transmit EIA. Mississippi is included in
the hot zone. "But
overall statistics indicate that the number of tests
positive for EIA in the United States has decreased greatly,
from 3 percent in 1972 to 0.10 percent today," Robertson
said. It is
difficult to produce a vaccine for this deadly disease
because the virus can vary its protein makeup, making it
difficult to produce an antibody that will fight off every
form of the disease, Robertson said. "For
an EIA vaccine to be effective, it would have to protect the
horse against all the different types of EIA viruses," he
said. "Research is currently under way to develop a vaccine
and, hopefully, one day a successful cure will be
developed." Released:
June 30, 2003
Animal
Health
![]()
EIA menace
remains...
Horses
vulnerable to
disease threat
Contact: Dr. Stanley Robertson, (662) 325-2283
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:28:42
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/cvm/cvm03/030630.html
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