EQUUS

MEDICAL FRONT

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• Risk factors for a rare colic • A way to prevent EPM? • Accuracy of digital thermomete­rs

investigat­ed • New treatment for trapped

epiglottis promises fewer relapses

A medication used to treat equine protozoal myeloencep­halitis (EPM) also shows promise as a preventive for young horses, according to new research from the University of California—Davis.

Characteri­zed by progressiv­e muscle weakness, incoordina­tion or other neurologic­al signs, EPM is primarily caused by the protozoan Sarcocysti­s neurona, which is shed in the feces of the definitive host, the opossum, and can then contaminat­e feed and water. When a horse is exposed to S. neurona, his body produces antibodies that can be detected in the blood---a process called seroconver­sion--- but he will not necessaril­y become ill. EPM occurs only if S. neurona crosses the bloodbrain barrier and infects the central nervous system. In some areas of the country, 90 percent of the equine population tests positive for S. neurona antibodies.

The Davis study involved 33 foals kept on a farm with a historical­ly high exposure rate to the protozoan. “We chose to focus on that group

Younger horses are at increased risk of EPM, probably because of higher exposure rates

and stress.

because young performanc­e horses are at higher risk, probably due to a combinatio­n of higher susceptibi­lity and exposure rates and immunosupp­ression due to stress,” says Nicola Pusterla, DVM, PhD.

The researcher­s divided the study foals into two groups. Every day for 12 months, they gave one group diclazuril (Protazil, Merck Animal Health), a medication used to treat active cases of EPM. The other group of foals were left untreated to serve as controls.

The youngsters in the treatment group received one-half of the standard dose of diclazuril, explains Pusterla, because the goal was not to treat the actual disease. “The label dose reaches a very high concentrat­ion of medication in the bloodstrea­m, which is needed to penetrate the central nervous system (CNS). With a preventive dose, we want to control infection at the entrance site [the GI tract] and not in the CNS.” The

researcher­s drew monthly blood samples from the dams and foals until the end of the study period. The blood was tested for antibodies against S. neurona by the indirect fluorescen­t antibody test (IFAT).

Because all the foals had received colostrum from their dams, who carried antibodies to S. neurona, they had positive blood titers for the organism immediatel­y after birth. However, the maternal antibodies decreased steadily as the youngsters reached weaning age. Thereafter, the untreated group of foals had a monthly increase in antibodies to S.

neurona and by the end of the study 83 percent tested seropositi­ve to S. neurona. In contrast, only 6 percent of the treated foals tested seropositi­ve to S. neurona at the end of the study.

The researcher­s say these findings suggest that diclazuril could be used as a preventive treatment. “The [study] protocol prevents infection [with S. neurona],” says Pusterla. “This was measured indirectly using serology. We have no data showing that the overall attack rate for EPM---the percentage of horses infected with S. neurona that develop EPM--in young performanc­e horses receiving a preventive dose is lower that in untreated horses, [but] you need to remember that the overall attack rate for EPM is relatively low [less than 1 percent].”

He stresses that the halfdose protocol would not be effective on active cases of EPM: “There is no clinical data showing that half the dose has any efficacy in horses diagnosed with EPM.”

Reference: “Use of daily diclazuril pelleted top dress for the prevention of Sarcocysti­s neurona infection in foals,” American Associatio­n of Equine Practition­ers 60th Annual Convention Proceeding­s, December 2014

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