May 22, 2012

Equine Parasite Management

If you have been paying attention the last year or so you have been hearing and reading that here in the US we have developed some resistant parasites in our horse population. How did we develop these resistant parasites? Well to be honest our deworming protocols. In our zeal to have a clean worm free horse population we have instead developed worms that are resistant to treatment. :-(

SO what to do? There are reports everywhere saying we should deworm regularly only with ivermectin, and others saying we should only deworm after testing to be sure our horse has parasites, and others still saying use a rotational deworming program but base it on the time of year rather than just every 30 or 60 days. However very little information is out there on how to actually prevent your horse from being infected in the first place. Well it is a matter of equine parasite management.

In equine parasite management one needs to first consider the actual risk of your horse being infected by parasites. The risk for a horse stabled and fed inside a barn and turned out by itself in its own personal dry lot is going to be much less than another horse that is kept in a small pasture with 5 other horses. With a horse in the environment as the latter, it is going to be near impossible to prevent infection from parasites, so one has to be dedicated to management of the pasture to prevent an overabundance.

The rules of equine parasite management -

  1. Clean up the manure in the pasture/turnout – a minimum of once a week this reduces the amount of eggs being delivered to the pasture and also the larva.
  2. If you feed hay and/or grain, feed inside the barn or at a minimum in a bunk off the ground and in an area separate from the pasture. If you do feed in a bunk outside place the bunk on a concrete pad or limestone. Clean feed buckets and bunks regularly.
  3. If possible divide your pastures and rotate the usage allowing a rest period to help kill off parasites.
  4. Test each horse’s manure regularly (once every 2-3 months) for parasites. One horse can be a high shedder and be the main infector and another have a very low parasite count. Knowing the high shedders will help you manage those individual horses and keep them separate from the rest of the herd if possible. Also you can treat the horses that shed and treat each horse as an individual which actually helps the entire herd.
  5. Deworm any new horse prior to introducing them to your herd.
If you use these five steps you can lower the risk of your horse being infected with parasites, then you do not have to worry about what you have to do with the deworming schedule or if you have to rotate or what product you have to use, because you will have a lower risk of parasite infection.

Other Sources for deworming and horse parasite control

Two Horses, Adjoining Pastures–Two Wildly Different Deworming

The worm load for the mare? Very small–only 34 (which is the number of eggs per gram), which makes her a “low shedder” of worm eggs. According to thi.

http://myhorse.com/blogs/horse-care/two-horses-adjoining-pastures-two-wildly-different-deworming-needs/

A Chilling Thought About Horse Deworming Schedules | MyHorse

Like you, I’ve read many conflicting horse deworming schedule reports. And it seems that for every horse deworming program based on a rotational drug.

http://myhorse.com/blogs/horse-care/a-chilling-thought-about-horse-deworming-schedules/

Every Horse Boarder’s Nightmare: A Young Horse’s Death from Severe Worm Damage and the Ten Commandments of Parasite Control

From the very day that newly-initiated horse owners pick up their crisp new how-to horsecare book or go to that first horse health lecture, the first commandment of horse health management echoes in their ears: Thou shalt worm thy horse religiously.

http://blogs.equisearch.com/horsehealth/2011/10/13/horse-worm-strongyle-clot-thromboembolism/

A cute video explaining the new concepts for deworming -

Superworm.m4v

Eggzamin Superworm – Drug Resistant Parasite in Horses. Time to rethink our deworming strategies.

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.