EIPH Flashcards

1
Q

Clinical signs of exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH)?

A
  • Most commonly no signs (most don’t bleed significantly enough to cause epistaxis)
  • poor performance
  • sudden onset exercise limitation
  • swallowing after exercise
  • epistaxis
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2
Q

How does exercise-induced pulmonary haemorrhage develop?

A
  • typically located in the caudodorsal lung lobes
  • Capillary stress failure theory
  • High pressures in pulmonary vasculature in the galloping horse due to CO and it ruptures
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3
Q

Why does EIPH occur generally in the caudodorsal lobes?

A
  • Higher blood flow
    • lower intrinsic vascular resistance
  • Displacement of the diaphragm causes transient falls in alveolar pressure
  • Lower alveolar pressure leads to greater transmural pressure
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4
Q

EIPH - Predisposing conditions?

A
  • Prevalence increases with age
  • Lower airway disease
  • Upper airway disease
  • Cardiac disease
    • Increases pulmonary artery pressure
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5
Q

EIPH – diagnosis?

A
  • Clinical evidence of EIPH (in severe cases)
  • Endoscopy
  • Bronchoalveolar lavage
    • RBCs, haemosiderophages
  • Radiography
  • Scintigraphy (experimental)
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6
Q

EIPH: case management?

A
  • Identify and address any predisposing diseases
  • Break haemorrhage-inflammation cycle
    • Modify training programme to reduce episodes
    • Dust-free environment
    • Furosemide (Not allowed in racehorses in the UK)
    • ?antibiotics
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7
Q

Effects of Furosemide on EIPH?

A
  • Diuretic effect
    • Reduce circulating volume
    • Reduce weight
  • Vasodilator effect
  • Not allowed in racehorses in the UK
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8
Q

How are nasal strips used for EIPH?

A
  • Not allowed in UK racing
    • Can train with them - Improve fitness and ability
  • Work by dilating the nostril thereby reducing airway pressures and promoting oxygen uptake
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9
Q

EIPH: prognosis?

A
  • GOOD TO FAIR
    • If having minimal impact on performance
    • If you can identify a primary cause and address it
  • POOR
    • for idiopathic bleeders with performance limitations
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10
Q

Infectious causes of URT disease?

A
  • VIRUSES
    • Equine influenza
    • Equine Herpes Virus 1&4
    • Equine Viral Arteritis
  • BACTERIA
    • Streptococcus equi equi
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11
Q

Viral causes of LRT disease?

A
  • Equine influenza
  • Equine Herpes virus 1&4
  • Equine Rhino virus
  • Equine Viral Arteritis
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12
Q

Bacterial causes of LRT disease?

A
  • Streptococcus zooepidemicus
    • The most important
  • Streptococcus pneumoniae
  • Pasteurella/actinobacillus
  • Rhodococcus equi
  • Streptococcus equi equi
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13
Q

Which mycoplasma species is associated with inflammatory airway disease?

A
  • Mycoplasma felis. Implicated as a cause of IAD
  • Isolated less commonly than other bacteria
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14
Q

Which antibiotic is Mycoplasma felis sensitive to?

A

Sensitive to oxytetracycline

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15
Q

Strains of equine herpes virus and what they cause?

A
  • EHV1 - respiratory disease, abortion, neonatal, neurological
  • EHV2 - respiratory disease in foals
  • EHV3 - penile vesicles
  • EHV4 - respiratory disease
  • EHV5 – Equine Pulmonary Nodular Fibrosis
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16
Q

Transmission of equine viral arteritis ND?

A
  • Transmission by respiratory and venereal routes
    • direct contact with an infected horse and its secretions
  • Reservoir of infections
    • Stallions that are chronic shedders
    • Until they are castrated will continue to spread disease
17
Q

Clinical signs of equine viral arteritis ND?

A
  • abortion and still birth
  • peripheral oedema
  • rhinitis and bronchitis/brochiolitis
  • conjunctivitis and periorbital oedema
18
Q

General supportive treatment for equine lung disease?

A
  • Rest
  • Improve environement - dust free management
  • Anti-pyretics
19
Q

How should you ideally manage an outbreak of EHV-1?

A
  • Impose isolation policy on premises (Identify high and low risk animals and separate them)
  • Serology on all in-contacts
  • Separate negative and positive horses, re-test two weeks later
  • Repeat until all horses have two negative samples
  • Handlers and vets are important fomites so good hand hygiene is vital
20
Q

Risk factors for neonatal respiratory disease?

A
  • Placentitis
  • Placental insufficiency
  • Maternal illness
  • Early lactation
  • Poor colostrum
  • Prematurity
  • Dystocia
  • Premature placental seperation
  • Failure of passive transfer
  • Other neonatal illness
21
Q

What is respiratory distress syndrome in neonates?

A
  • Atelectasis (collapse/failure of the lungs to expand due to lack of surfactant) due to
    • Inadequate surfactant function
    • Structurally immature lung and muscles of respiration
  • Associated with prematurity and dysmaturity
22
Q

How does meconium aspiration occur in neonates?

A
  • Stress in utero or during parturition leads to defecation,
  • meconium enters airways with fetal fluid,
  • aspirated when foal is born and starts breathing
  • secondary bacterial pneumonia
23
Q

Clinical signs and diagnosis of meconium aspiration?

A
  • Clinical signs: respiratory distress, nasal discharge
  • Diagnosis: meconium staining
24
Q

What can cause aspiration pneumonia in neonates?

A
  • Dysphagia
    • neurological - uncommon, transient, manifestation of NMS
  • Cleft palate
  • Inappropriate bottle feeding
25
Q

How does pneumothorax & haemothorax occur in neonates?

A
  • due to trauma at birth causing rib fractures
26
Q

How does Perinatal Asphyxia Syndrome develop?

A
  • Ischaemia, oedema and reperfusion injury to foal’s brain, kidneys, intestine and other organs due to lack of oxygen (especially CNS depression)
    • In utero hypoxia
    • Interruption of oxygen supply during birth
27
Q

Clinical signs of Perinatal Asphyxia Syndrome?

A
  • May not be apparent until the foal is 12-24 hours old
  • Severe cases may have central respiratory depression
  • Almost stop breathing completely
28
Q

Management and prognosis of perinatal asphyxia syndrome?

A
  • Require lots of 24 hour nursing care, especially by the time they are severe. (very expensive)
  • Prognosis of this condition is dependent on whether they receive this intensive nursing
    • Without this they will die
    • With this they will either die or recover 100% and regain full athletic function and be able to be a performance animal as they should have been, no in between
29
Q

Why is lung auscultation not a sensitive diagnostic tool in foals?

A

Normal foal lungs have harsh bronchovesicular sounds (don’t have normal lung sounds like adults)

30
Q

Signs of sepsis in the mucous membranes of a foal?

A
  • Signs of sepsis: congestion/injection, petechiae
  • Congested mucous membranes – dark red not pink
  • Inside the ear pinna is showing the petechiae
31
Q

How is Rhodococcus equi transmitted?

A
  • Inhaled pathogen
    • Ingested from soil (via faeces)
    • Lives in environment
    • Farms that have it tend to get it year to year
32
Q

When does Rhodococcus equi tend to be seen in foals?

A
  • Foals 2-6 months of age
    • As MDA reduces