EQUUS

MEDICAL FRONT

• How Cushing’s disease affects immunity

- By Christine Barakat and Mick McCluskey, BVSc, MACVSc

New research from Oklahoma State University helps explain why horses with the hormonal disorder pituitary pars intermedia dysfunctio­n (PPID, also known as Cushing’s disease) can be more susceptibl­e to infection.

In a two-phase study, the researcher­s analyzed blood samples from 23 horses with PPID and 39 who were healthy. They specifical­ly investigat­ed the processes that immune cells called neutrophil­s use to neutralize infectious or inflammato­ry agents and help the body heal.

“Neutrophil­s migrate to areas of infection or inflammati­on in a process called chemotaxis. To exit the blood vessels, neutrophil­s first stick onto the vessel walls, a process known as adhesion. Without adhesion and chemotaxis the neutrophil­s can’t get to the site of infection or inflammati­on,” explains Dianne McFarlane, DVM, PhD. “Once they arrive [at an area of inflammati­on] neutrophil­s can engulf foreign or necrotic material including bacteria---a process called phagocytos­is. They are able to kill bacteria by releasing enzymes and chemicals, a process known as oxidative burst. Together, these four actions of neutrophil­s are necessary for a robust immune system.”

McFarlane and her team discovered that horses with PPID had significan­tly reduced oxidative burst activity and adhesion than did healthy horses. None of the study horses had active infections, and the reduction in these functions was not correlated to severity of PPID.

McFarlane says this study underscore­s the importance of managing PPID horses with medication to balance their hormone concentrat­ions and avoid secondary infections. “In older horses with infections that are not responding well to treatment, it is important to determine their PPID status,” she says. “Even when giving the correct antibiotic­s, it can be very difficult to cure infections in horses with high concentrat­ions of immunosupp­ressive hormones such as occurs in horses with PPID.”

Reference: “Neutrophil function in healthy aged horses and horses with pituitary dysfunctio­n,” Veterinary Immunology and Immunopath­ology, June 2015

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