Alert

Alert
Publication Date: January 2022 | Publication Number: AZ1985-2022 | View PDF

Overview

West Nile Virus (WNV), also known as West Nile Encephalitis is a virus that impacts horses and humans. This ALIRT was initially issued for South Central Arizona in January 2022.

Transmission

The vector is mosquitoes, which get infected with the virus by feeding on infected birds. Incubation period following the bite can be 5-15 days. While birds act as a reservoir, horses and humans are not reservoir hosts, so cannot spread the virus back and forth without mosquito bites. Humans must get the virus from mosquito bites. Due to the warm weather in southern Arizona, mosquito transmission can occur all year round. 

Signs

Signs can vary from horse to horse. Most signs will be neurological and can get progressively worse. Early signs include depression, increased sensitivity to external stimuli, occasional fever, head drooping, incoordination, excessive chewing motions, muscle twitching (muzzle, ears, and fine muscles), and aggression. Progressive signs include weakness in limbs, seizures, head drooping, partial paralysis, central nervous system signs (e.g., inability to stand), death. 

Diagnosis

Diagnosis must be done by veterinarian which will include lab tests for serum/ELISA, and occasionally with testing of cerebrospinal fluids to determine which virus is affecting the horse. 

Treatment and Care

Initial treatment: Keep horse well hydrated. Contact veterinarian for further care since the treatments will depend on the animals’ health and age. Veterinarians may use anti-inflammatory drugs to reduce swelling and neurological signs. Supportive care will depend on the extent of the signs the horse is showing, but could include slings, nutrition via feeding tubes, and other treatments recommended by your veterinarian. Prognosis will depend on severity of signs, with some horses recovering fully while other horses may always have some residual neurological deficient.

Prevention

While there is no vaccination for humans, there is a vaccine for horses and you should work with your veterinarian for a protocol. Management for prevention would include adapting turnout times to avoid dawn and dusk when mosquitoes are most active, or the use of fans in stables to keep mosquitos out of stalls. Use appropriate biting insect control on horses including sprays, wipes and fly sheets. Reduce all environmental mosquito attractants such as stagnant standing water.

Alert
Publication Date: January 2022 | Publication Number: AZ1987-2022 | View PDF

Overview

Equine Infectious Anemia (EIA) is virus that impacts equine (horses, donkeys and mules). This ALIRT was initially issued for Maricopa County in January 2022.

Transmission

The vector is blood feeding insects such as mosquitoes and horse or deer flies,
using contaminated equipment during equine medical procedures, or from poor bio-security practices.

Signs

Signs can vary from horse to horse. Early signs include depression, low and/or high grade fever, red areas on the mucous membranes indicating small areas of hemorrhaging, animal goes off its feed and increasing muscle weakness. Progressive signs include adema, increased weakness and depression, and occasionally death.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis must be done by veterinarian which will include lab tests for platelet counts, anemia, and the Coggins test. The test checks for antibody levels in the blood. A positive test indicates the animal has EIA.

Treatment

Initial treatment: Immediately quarantine the horses and any other horses that may have been exposed. Increase all bio-security measures at the animals location. There is not a treatment or vaccine available. Contact veterinarian immediately for testing and supportive care.

Prognosis

Very poor. Once infected the horse will be a carrier for their lifetime, and can pass the disease onto other horses. Animals may be humanely euthanized. If not, they are required to remain in quarantine and cannot be moved from the premises without USDA APHIS approval.

Prevention

Prevention is the primary mechanism in handling EIA. Immediately isolate a horse that is running a fever until the cause is identified. Apply insect repellent frequently, minimize standing water, practice fly control measures, keep the horses area free of trash or brush piles, and regularly muck out stalls and common areas. Practice good bio-security by using clean needles for vaccinations between each animal, disinfect all equipment for dental, lip tattoo, or surgical purposes. Avoid equine events that do not require a negative Coggins test to participate, and require a negative Coggins test for all incoming equines coming on your property.