May 18, 2012

Equine Rhino Vaccination – is it worth it?

It is the fall season and many people are inquiring about what vaccinations they should give their horse. Equine Rhino, Equine Influenza, Potomac Horse Fever, and Rabies are the common ones asked for in this area of the US. However are they worth it? Do you actually know what they do and how they protect? Did you know that many times they do not protect at all like you think they should?

Equine Rhinopneumonitis, one of my favorite diseases to bash the vaccine. Why bash the vaccine? Well to put it bluntly and simply, because it doesn’t work in protecting your horse. This is a herpes virus and like the herpes viruses in humans it can infect the animal for life. The virus remains dormant and the horse will not show signs of infection, this is called latency. However during periods of stress, such as show season, out breaks can occur. The vaccine for rhino does not appear to be able to prevent these outbreaks and is questionable as to whether it even helps stem the signs and symptoms. The disease causes respiratory signs, abortions and infrequently a paralyzing neurologic disease with similar signs as the infamous Equine Protozoal Myelitis (EPM). The neurologic form has been in the news for the past couple of years because there appears to be a very virulent strain causing the neuroplogic form that has closed racetracks in Maryland and has had a very large impact on the horse industry where ever it has been found. The vaccines for rhino do not produce antibodies in all horses, in fact, most vaccines produce antibodies in only 80% of horses. In the horses that it does produce antibodies, they last for a very short time (2 to 3 months); and even though it may produce antibodies this doesn’t mean the horse is protected from acquiring the disease. Currently the studies show that the vaccines are able to effectively reduce the symptoms of the respiratory form of the disease in about 50% of the horses. One last bit of bad news is that none of the vaccines out there are able to protect against the neurologic form of the virus.

So now you are asking, “Why am I vaccinating for this disease it appears that the vaccine doesn’t work?” Short of saying, “I don’t know.” it does appear that multiple vaccination (every 3 months) in high-risk horses, such as show horses, reduces the severity of the disease. In pregnant mares it appears to prevent abortion storms meaning multiple abortions on the same breeding farm; however the disease can and will still occur in individuals, because some horses do not respond at all to the vaccine. So if you are willing to give the vaccine every three months…oh wait there is a problem with doing this as well…. the immune system has a limited capacity for responding to vaccine. If you give it too many vaccines at the same time or space them too closely, you dilute the immune response to each vaccine. So giving multiple vaccines every two to three months over a long period of time will reduce the effectiveness of the vaccine which has a poor effectiveness to begin with. Not to mention that in dogs and cats it has been discovered that multiple vaccinations causes (let me repeat) causes immune system failure such as allergies, cancers and autoimmune diseases. Check out – Is Your Vet overvaccinating your dog? for more information. The horse is a different animal but there is anecdotal evidence in horses with allergies that reducing the number of vaccines up to totally eliminating them reduces the severity of their allergies to the point where they are unnoticable.

So lets bring this back to fall vaccinations…the last time your horse may have received a rhino shot was in the spring. The vaccine, if it produces antibodies in your horse, lasts 2 to 3 months, it is what now 6 months or 9 months later? How effective has that vaccine been in protecting your horse? So why are you wasting your money? So No – Equine Rhino Vaccination is not worth it.

Horses for kids

Do you have kids and are they interested in horses or you would like them to be? Well I have a website for you. The University of Guelph has redesigned their horse website. I heard about it and went to check it out at http://www.equineguelph.ca It is a nice website but what I found there was another link to another site and if you have kids you are going to want to go to http://www.equimania.ca This site will definitely teach them about horse health care and they will not even know the are learning; they are just having fun.

Equimania Stables is very well designed with a lot of cool computer tricks such as books you read online that you use your mouse to turn the page just as if it was a real book. The tack room which teaches your child about colors, leg markings, face markings and it looks like they will have in the future anatomy. I got a perfect 100 in Happy Appy’s stall (stall 3 – hint be sure to pick the stall too). Oh and try and beat my high score (low time) on putting items away in the grooming box. You will find this game in the wash stall. I was able to do it in 5.9 seconds after about a dozen times it is quite addicting (did I say this site was for kids?) I did notice that a couple of pages are not finished but overall a very creative site and educational on how to care for your horse definitely worth a visit. So be sure to check out http://www.equimania.ca and teach your children about horse health care in a fun way!

Vaccine Challenge – Australia’s Equine Influenza

Keeping up on the story of Equine Influenza in Australia and the new vaccine being used. The first test, unfortunately or maybe not the vaccine has only had one dose given, is occurring at a race track in Australia. Ususally when the first dose of a vaccine is given antibodies are not produced in a high enough quantity and do not have a sustained duration to actually offer protection. In some vaccines they do. So we will see what occurs… Here is the link to the story…
Vaccine faces first test as virus strikes Rosehill stable

The 5 keys to improving your horse’s movement

Here are the 5 keys to improving your horse’s movement. I will go into detail on each topic in the coming weeks and then I will also have it all prepared in an ebook soon to be published.

In order to improve your horses movement, besides the actual rider and trainer, and/or keep your horse moving correctly as well as its conformation will allow, you need to focus on these 5 key areas…

  • Nutrition
  • Dentistry
  • Farriery
  • Saddle & Tack Fit
  • Management
  • The details will be all available in a book called How to Avoid the Horse Chiropractor. Coming soon.

    Webinar on West Nile Virus

    One of my favorite magazines and the company that makes one of the vaccines that actually works against West Nile Virus are having a free webinar. On October 2nd at 2PM eastern time (that is 1PM for those of us in the central time zone), TheHorse.com is hosting this event with sponsor Intervet makers of Prevenile. I guarantee you that there will be some pushing of their vaccine however the webinar will have a lot of other great information with two top researchers in the field of Equine infectious diseases, Dr. Debra Sellon and Dr. Maureen Long.

    Here is the link for more information and to sign up…

    http://www.thehorse.com/ViewArticle.aspx?ID=10480

    I will be unable to attend (I will be in a barn no where near a computer), so please someone sign up and let me know if it was worth the price of admission…LOL (Remember it is free)

    Australia to test out ProteqFlu

    We are closer here in the United States to obtain ProteqFlu and Australia with its current problem with Influenza is going to be able to use the vaccine. This is good real good.

    Now I know what many of my regular readers are thinking…Dr. Dan why are you excited about a vaccine. Well let me tell you the technology used in this vaccine by Merial is the same technology used in the West Nile Virus vaccine. It is a recombinant DNA technology virus using Canary Pox virus as the vector.

    So what does this mean for you… it means you have a vaccine that works and one with less reactions. Here is the study done by Merial – http://avmajournals.avma.org/doi/abs/10.2460/ajvr.68.2.213 I know, I know a study done by the company that makes the vaccine can be a little well you know… biased. SO I did a search for a few others…. and they all showed very good efficacy in fighting off influenza in the horse.

    One in particular showed a group of ponies vaccinated with one strain of virus challenged with another genetic shift strain and the ponies at the most had a slight nasal discharge that lasted for one day while the control group became quite ill. One of the first times that there actually was an instance in cross reactivity with a different strain.

    You see influenza in people mutates every year in the horse it mutates every 10 years or so, this is called genetic shift of the influenza strains. The last mutation was the 2003 Wisconsin strain, which is the strain suspected (99% gentically similar) to be causing all the havoc in Australia. The last one before that I beleive was the 1997 Kentucky Strain and before that was the 1993 Kentucky Strain, so it is possible that the horse flu has now shifted to an every 5 year genetic shift – if that is the case we should be expecting a genetic shift in the next year or two. SO this vaccine with the prospect of it actually protecting horses with less reactions is very exciting and promising. Lets see what it can do for the Australians and there current problem.

    For more information on this check out The Horse they have been doing a great job covering the story in Australia.

    Here are a few stories from them…

    http://www.thehorse.com/ViewArticle.aspx?ID=10459&nID=6

    http://www.thehorse.com/ViewArticle.aspx?ID=10462&nID=6

    http://www.thehorse.com/ViewArticle.aspx?ID=10441&nID=6

    With all the use over there I will certainly be paying close attention to how effective it is. I have high hopes for Proteqflu as a new generation of vaccine. One that actually works has a long lasting duration of immunity and has less reactions.

    e-Vet Clinic Podcast

    Here you go the very first e-Vet Clinic Podcast -

    West Nile Virus – How to prevent your horse from contracting

    -OR-

    Click here to download…

    The basics on what to do to prevent your horses from contracting this neurological disease that is transmitted by mosquitos. Since vaccination is not 100% effective you need to listen to this podcast to know what else to do to reduce the threat of west nile virus infection.

    e-Vet Clinic Newsletter

    Well the first e-Vet Clinic Weekly newsletter went out this evening.

    What you did not get one? You are not signed up for the newsletter??? Well then you better get signed up…


    Name:
    Email:

    Every Friday or maybe Saturday morning, I will be sending out a newsletter. It will have of course an article on horse health and one on dog health, along with other good “stuff” – like contests, personal information about me, offerings for newsletter members, special resources. I treat my newsletter members like my closest friends. If you take the time to give out your email address to me, if you want to know what I have to say and you really like what I have to say so much that you are willing to sign up for my newsletter, then you are my friend. So just sign up in the form above.

    Fecal Egg Counts – parasite control for improved horse health

    As many of you know I am a proponent of doing routine fecal egg counts as opposed to actually deworming your horse every month with an antiparasite medication. Which means sending in horse manure samples to a lab or your vet (who sends them to a lab) and determining how many parasite eggs are seen in the sample. If there are only a couple or none it can be reasonably accepted that your horse has a low count of parasites (a lot of factors do play into this, I am oversimplifying here). If there are more than a couple of eggs in the fecal sample then it gives you a reason to deworm your horse with an antiparasite medication, such as Ivermectin, Fenbendazole, etc.

    Now granted if your horse lives in a small pasture that has multiple horses, more than 1 horse per acre, you may have no choice but to give your horse deworming medication on a monthly basis. A lot depends on the immune system and digestive system of the horse and the actual parasite load of the pasture itself as to if you will have to deworm monthly. Still I really promote using companies such as Horsemen’s Laboratory on a regular basis even if you are deworming regularly, as it will help determine if your deworming program is actually even working.

    For the majority of performance horses that are stall kept and are either out on large pastures, turned out in dry lots, or have a single pasture to themselves, these horses would have no benefit of using deworming products on a regular basis, because they just do not have exposure to parasites, and in fact, you would, in most cases, be over treating which has been implicated in affecting the immune system against other parasites such as EPM (not proven just implicated) or in the face of a real parasite infestation your horse could become debilitated rather quickly. Fecal egg counts on a monthly or every other month basis would be sufficient to know whether or not you even need to treat your horse. The one thing that really needs to be focused on here is parasite control for the improvement of your horse’s health; not total annihilation of every parasite in your horse’s digestive system. Horses have maintained a balance with parasites for thousands of years; it is just recently that due to mans domestication and concentration of horses in one location that intestinal parasites have become a factor in horse health and well being. Fecal egg counts are a good means of determining how much control we have in parasite loads of our horses.

    The Horse has a great article on fecal egg counts –>Fecal Egg Count Exams Offer Useful Information for Horse Health Management.
    It explains in detail the limitations of using fecal egg counts but also relates the important message that fecal egg counts are the gold standard when testing for parasite infestation of your horse and most importantly -

    Parasitologists generally agree that the proper objective of parasite control is to maintain the parasite burden at a low level, rather than to eliminate parasites entirely. This middle ground avoids over-treatment, limits the cost of parasite control, and helps horses maintain partial immunity to overwhelming infection. In other words, it’s a good idea to allow a very low level of parasite infection so that horses’ immune systems can learn to deal with these invaders if they occur in larger numbers.

    Just for this quote alone the article is worth a read and a reread. And what I am completely impressed with is the veterinarian quoted in the article is from a pharmaceutical company, maybe they are not all out just for the company…LOL. So for improving your horses health look to do more fecal egg counts rather than just medicating your horse and even if you are medicating your horse do fecal egg counts to determine the effectiveness of your program.

    How much weight should a horse carry?

    One question asked a lot is exactly how much weight should a horse carry? Now usually this is asked by someone watching a larger individual get on a small horse and ride the living daylights out of the poor little thing. Many people promote a rule of thumb of 10% of the horse’s bodyweight, but before I go and promote the same thing lets compare horses to humans for a minute.

    How much weight can you comfortably carry for long extended periods of time 1/2 hour or more?

    If you are a soldier in the army and you weigh 200 lbs then your 100 lbs rucksack is 50% of your body weight and you will be carrying that all day long!

    If you are a 140 lbs Mom you can easily be carrying your 30 lbs 2 year old through a store for 15 to 20 minutes and that is just over 20% of your body weight and it depends on what shape you are in if you can carry that child comfortably or not.

    SO what does this mean for a horse? If still means what kind of shape your horse is in, what type of structure your horse is, and if it has any other complicating factors such as arthritis as to how much weight they should be carrying. In my opinion the rule of thumb should be 10 to 30% of the horse’s body weight depending on condition of the horse and how long of a ride and what type of riding you will be doing. A nice easy trail ride on a good conditioned horse (meaning one that has been ridden for a couple months at least three times per week for a minimum of 20 minutes at a time) should be able to carry 25% of its body weight for an hour to two hour trail ride without a problem and with rest stops in between should be able to go all day long. That same horse should be able to carry 25% of its bodyweight in a competition setting say like jumping or dressage for 20 minutes without a concern.

    So on average a horse weighs 1000 lbs (Arabs and ponies are smaller more like 700 lbs and Warmbloods and draft crosses are larger more like 1200 to 1500lbs) so that means if you and your tack weigh less than 250lbs and your horse is properly conditioned you should have no problem going for an hour long trail ride or an arena type event.

    Now lets go bigger. Lets say you are a Cowboy of a larger stature and weigh 250 lbs yourself and your saddle and gear weigh 50 lbs that is a total weight of 300 lbs. Your horse either needs to be conditioned well and weigh 1200 lbs or needs to be in top condition and weigh at least 1000 lbs. These poor little Arabs that weigh only 700 lbs and have a 250 lbs lets say guy riding them on a 25 mile endurance ride are definitely more like the Army guy carrying the 100 lbs rucksack; oh it can be done but their body sure takes a beating from it.

    So to be nice to your horse – if your horse is not conditioned stay at the 10% of the horses bodyweight, if it is conditioned well you can up that but stay below 30% to have a happy healthy horse!