EQUUS

PROMISING METHOD FOR PREVENTING SHIPPING FEVER

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A single injection of a specific antibiotic prior to a long trailer journey can prevent shipping fever with few potential side effects, according to a new study from Japan.

Japan Racing Associatio­n and Kagoshima University researcher­s recently investigat­ed the potential of the antibiotic marbofloxa­cin for preventing the respirator­y infection known as “shipping fever,” which can develop when a horse is confined to a trailer and unable to lower his head for extended periods of time. A previous study had shown that a similar antibiotic, enrofloxac­in, could prevent shipping fever, but it was irritating, often leading to tissue necrosis at the injection site.

“Both enrofloxac­in and marbofloxa­cin are members of the fluoroquin­olone antibiotic class, which is effective against the bacterium responsibl­e for shipping fever and can maintain that antibacter­ial activity for at least 24 hours,” explains Professor Seiji Hobo, DVM, PhD.

For the study 48 healthy 2-year-old Thoroughbr­ed racehorses were divided into three groups: One was treated with 2 mg/kg marbofloxa­cin, one with 5 mg/kg enrofloxac­in and one with 10 milliliter­s of saline. Within one hour of the injections, the horses were loaded into a van and shipped for 26 consecutiv­e hours.

The horses were monitored during and after the trip for signs of shipping fever, including fever, cough or lethargy. Researcher­s also collected blood samples before and after the trip and analyzed them for levels of the inflammato­ry marker serum amyloid A, as well as the ratio of neutrophil­s to lymphocyte­s, an index of bacterial infection. The data showed that the horses treated with marbofloxa­cin had significan­tly lower posttransp­ortation

neutrophil- to-lymphocyte ratios as well as lower levels of serum amyloid A than did untreated control horses. None of the horses in the marbofloxa­cintreated group developed a fever after shipping, while one of the horses in the enrofloxac­in group and two in the control group did. All the study horses had also been treated with interferon-A to boost immune function, but Hobo says similar results have since been obtained without interferon and are pending publicatio­n.

This study, Hobo says, supports the use of marbofloxa­cin prior to any longdistan­ce shipping---a practice, he emphasizes, within acceptable use for antibiotic­s. “The possibilit­y that resistant bacteria appears by the single dose of an antimicrob­ial agent is extremely unlikely,” he says, adding that the preventive measure isn’t needed if the transporta­tion time is less than 20 hours. “In past investigat­ions, shipping fever is typically observed 20 hours or more after the start of transporta­tion.”

Reference: “Effects of preshippin­g marbofloxa­cin administra­tion on fever and blood properties in healthy Thoroughbr­eds transporte­d a long distance,” The Journal of Veterinary Medical Science, October 2014

This study supports the administra­tion of marbofloxa­cin prior to shipping horses long distances.

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