Infectious disease and vaccinations Flashcards

1
Q

core vaccine diseases

A
  • rabies
  • tetanus
  • west nile virus
  • eastern equine encephalitis
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2
Q

optional vaccinated diseases

A

-equine influenza, equine herpesvirus, stragnles, potomac horse fever, botulism, equine viral arteritis

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3
Q

epidemiologic triad

A

-spreading disease requires 1. susceptible hosts 2. infective agent 3. supportive environment

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4
Q

risk factors of vaccination

A
  • geography
  • pregnancy
  • age
  • exposure to other horses
  • in and out traffic
  • stress
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5
Q

geography, horses, and vaccines

A

-horses in rural areas with little contact with other horses have little risk of exposure to agents
-if exposed, however, can show severe signs because of no previous contact and thus reduced immunity
RECOMMENDATION: CORE VACCINES

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6
Q

broodmares, pregnancy, and vaccines

A
  • HIGH RISK: agents can kill fetus, damage placenta, cause hyperthermia, and result in abortions
  • ie. herpes can become active and cause abortion STORMS amongst herds
  • vaccines AND mares must be separated
  • recommend core and optional vaccines like influenza, equine herpesvirus and strangles
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7
Q

age, foals

A
  • passive immunity from mare’s colostrum provides most of foal’s antibodies for first 9-12 weeks
  • foals produce own antibodies, but not enough for first 2 months
  • recommend vaccinate mare 4-6 weeks BEFORE foaling, and foal at 6 months; if mare not vaccinated, foal at 3 months
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8
Q

in and out traffic

A
  • barns with many horses lead to high exposure rates
  • horses attending competitions and travelling have high risk of exposure and stress that can reduce immunity
  • recommend core + vaccines for influenza, equine herpesvirus, and strangles
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9
Q

rabies virus

A

causes fatal disease in mammals

  • virus shed in saliva and transmitted inbites
  • approx 1 case each year past 3 years
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10
Q

rabies hosts in NA

A

skunks, fox, raccoon, coyote,

bat most common case, only reservoir of rabies in BC

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11
Q

rabies symptoms

A

rapidly progressive but preventable with vaccines

  • symptoms develop in 10 days
  • furious, dumb, paralytic, consider all neurological cases potentially rabies
  • rabies vaccines are licensed and must be used by veterinarian
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12
Q

livestock exposed to rabies must be revaccinated in…

A

45 days; unvaccinated are to be slaughtered immediately or kept under watch for 6 months

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13
Q

tetanus

A

aka lockjaw, often fatal and caused by clostridium tetani

  • spores present in soil and contaminate wounds and umbillici of foals
  • C. tetani produces neurotoxin causing muscle spasms
  • vaccine neutrilizes toxin
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14
Q

west nile virus

A
  • spread by moquitoes and cause encephalitis (inflammation of brain)
  • zoonotic
  • low mortality and sickness in horses
  • fatal in 30% of horses showing neuro signs
  • 40% of survivors have residual neuro deficits for months or even permanent disability
  • severe cases may have ataxia, weakness of hind limbs, recumbency, muscle fasciculations, fever
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15
Q

west nile treatment

A

supportive care, slings, fluids, anti-inflammatories

-vaccination prior to mosquito season

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16
Q

eastern equine encephalitis

A

-virus spread by mosquitoes that feed on birds
-immediately notify in canada
-occurs in eastern canada
-NOT zoonotic
80-90% of horses get lethal neurological disease
rapid progression in 24 hours-10 days: fever, mania propulsive walking hyperesthesia aggression, recumbency and death
NO TREATMENT only prevention
-vaccine covers both EEE and WEE

17
Q

optional vaccines

A

diseases that have

  • variable impact on health of horses
  • low risk of life-threatening
  • vaccine is not great at prevention
  • occur in a specific region
  • vaccines increase risk, ie. botulism
18
Q

equine influenza

A

acute, contagious, resp disease

  • unique ability to mutate rapidly and spread between species
  • high infection rate but low mortality in horses
  • incubation of 2-3 days
  • sudden onset and rapid spread
19
Q

influenza vaccine

A

-does not always prevent influenza
-most susceptible between aages 1-5
-vaccinate pregant mares 4-6 weeks prior to foaling
-must revaccinate at 6 weeks, 6 month intervals
clinical signs: fever, dry cough, nasal discharge