African Horse Sickness Loosens Hold On Thailand

The African Horse Sickness outbreak that affected Thailand has now been resolved in multiple provinces. Efforts to eradicate it elsewhere in the country are ongoing. The provinces Thailand's Department of Livestock Development reported resolved are: Chaiyaphum, Sa Kaeo, Ratchaburi, Chonburi and Prachuap Khiri Khan.

Carried by biting midges, the virus kills nearly 90 percent of the horses it infects; Thailand's first experience with the virus began in February. Efforts to control the spread of infection have included establishing surveillance and containment zones, restricting movement, quarantine and disinfection. Barns housing horses have been wrapped in plastic or fine mesh and regularly fumigated to keep the insects away from horses.

Nearly 6,000 African Horse Sickness vaccines have been administered, some of which have been given to zebras. There is suspicion that the disease was brought to Thailand through zebra importation; the import of zebras was terminated on April 8.

It is reported that between 150 and 500 horses have died.

Read more at HorseTalk.

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44,000 Pounds Of Free Horse Feed Available In Texas

The Humane Society of North Texas (HSNT) is giving away 44,000 pounds of alfalfa cubes for any horse owner needing assistance in feeding their animals because of the COVID-19 pandemic. The feed, available through a partnership with the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA), is available to anyone, regardless of which county or city the owner lives in.

Generously donated by Standlee Premium Western Forage Products, owners can receive up to four bags per horse (for five horses total) while supplies last. Product can be picked up at the HSNT Equine Ranch at 1033 County Road 910 in Joshua, between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. on Sunday. No reservations are required.

Read more at NBCDRF and visit the HSNT Facebook page.

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Social Media Assists In Equine Adoptions Amid Pandemic

Social media has been a game-changer for animal adoptions of all kinds; it allows organizations to reach more people for less cost than traditional print or radio campaigns. When the COVID-19 pandemic forced people into their homes, many with more idle time than usual, they became a captive audience spending more time on social media, a fact that wasn't lost on New Vocations Racehorse Adoption Program, the nation's oldest and largest racehorse rehoming program.

Anna Ford, Thoroughbred Program Director at New Vocations in Lexington, KY, spoke to the ASPCA about how the program uses social media to help their horses find homes. In April and May, New Vocations adopted out 163 horses into new homes—an astounding number in and of itself, but adding a pandemic to the mix makes that number even more impressive.

Anna credits adding in daily Facebook Live “meet-and-greets” with adoptable horses and the lowering of adoption fees to assisting in moving so many horses. The videos were then shared on Instagram, YouTube and Twitter, with an exponential growth in viewership.

New Vocations tailors its content to each platform; on Twitter the program focuses mainly on the racing industry, and Facebook, YouTube and Instagram are where potential adopters generally look for horses. The Facebook Live sessions have been extremely well received; potential adopters feel they get to “know” the horses a bit more than what we post online in their biographies.

The program plans to continue the Facebook Live sessions even after businesses reopen across the country.

Read more at ASPCA Pro.

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Even With Screening, Equine Cardiac Problems Prove Difficult To Catch

Regulatory veterinarians say it's not as easy as you'd think to pick up on heart problems in racehorses.

That was one of the takeaways from this year's Welfare and Safety of the Racehorse Summit, held this year through a series of online webinars due to COVID-19. In the conclusion of the series, veterinary epidemiologist Dr. Tim Parkin noted that while equine fatalities due to musculoskeletal injury have gone down in the decade he has tracked injuries, fatalities due to other causes have not improved. Musculoskeletal injuries make up 93 percent of fatal injuries, but on-track deaths can sometimes have other causes, like cardiac problems. Parkin said he believed the reason musculoskeletal injuries had gone down was because most of the health and welfare reforms initiated around the country thus far were focused on limbs and lameness.

The trouble is, cardiac problems aren't that easily detected in horses.

In 2016, we spoke to Dr. Sophy Jesty of the Charleston Veterinary Referral Center who is board certified in large animal internal medicine and cardiology. Jesty explained that horses do not have “heart attacks” the way humans do. A human heart attack is the result of a blocked artery which kills part of the heart muscle. Horses do not experience this, but they can experience things that look like heart attacks — including a ruptured aorta, which may be undetectable until the horse bleeds out internally and collapses, or an arrhythmia (abnormal beat).

At the time of that interview, regulatory veterinarians were growing more curious about the best way to screen horses for arrhythmias. In a separate session of the Welfare and Safety Summit this year, New York's equine medical director revealed he had done some informal screenings with an inexpensive handheld ECG device, but he didn't find much.

“One of the problems I encountered in our necropsy program we had a number of horses had experienced exercise-induced sudden death on our racetracks and nearly 70 percent of those horses were necropsy negative, meaning there was no obvious answer for what had happened,” said Dr. Scott Palmer. “This backs us in to the conclusion that cardiac arrhythmias could be the cause of death, and I thought, 'Gee, we probably ought to look at that a little bit.'

“Interestingly, I've examined more than 200 horses so far with this thing and have never found a cardiac arrhythmia where I'd say this horse can't race.”

In Maryland, veterinarians listen to horses with a stethoscope as part of the standard pre-race exam and have done so for the past four to five years, according to Mike Hopkins, executive director of the Maryland Racing Commission. Hopkins said the team of veterinarians estimate they have discovered fewer than ten cases of arrhythmias in that time. There were 3,883 starters in the state of Maryland last year.

Those familiar with arrhythmias in horses probably wouldn't find that surprising. Although the scientific community is still learning about cardiac problems in horses, many experts believe that some equine arrhythmias probably show up only when the horse is in work, and may be induced by the adrenaline rush a horse experiences in a race.

Palmer said that although he didn't find any rhythms of concern, that wouldn't discourage him from continuing to look.

“With that said, I believe that we should at least be looking at these horses for arrhythmias,” he continued. “I know horses have normal murmurs and I know they can have normal arrhythmias that disappear at exercise. I also know that horses do die of exercise-induced arrhythmias. I think the presence of atrial fibrillation or other significant arrhythmias, I think those horses should be scratched. And to be honest, if we don't look for it, we certainly never will find it.”

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