Line 38: |
Line 38: |
| The strongyles that occur in the horse can be divided on the basis of size into two groups | | The strongyles that occur in the horse can be divided on the basis of size into two groups |
| *'''Large''' strongyles | | *'''Large''' strongyles |
− | **''Strongylus'' species (3 species; used to be widespread prior to the introduction of worm control programmes; now uncommon) | + | **''[[Strongylus]]'' species (3 species; used to be widespread prior to the introduction of worm control programmes; now uncommon) |
− | **''Triodontophorus'' species (common) | + | **''[[Triodontophorus]]'' species (common) |
| *'''Small''' strongyles | | *'''Small''' strongyles |
− | **Also known as Cyathostomins (preferred term), cyathostomes, trichonemes or small redworms | + | **Also known as [[Cyathostomins]] (preferred term), cyathostomes, trichonemes or small redworms |
| **Cyathostomins (widespread, including 4 genera and over 40 species of worms) | | **Cyathostomins (widespread, including 4 genera and over 40 species of worms) |
| | | |
Line 72: |
Line 72: |
| *Ulcers heal and leave scars | | *Ulcers heal and leave scars |
| | | |
| + | '''Pathogenesis of infection with ''Strongylus'' species larvae''': |
| + | *''S. vulgaris'': |
| + | **Potentially highly pathogenic |
| + | **Damage to cranial mesenteric artery → endarteritis → thrombosis and possibly embolism → colic |
| + | *Other ''Strongylus'' species : |
| + | **Relatively non-pathogenic |
| + | **Migration of ''S. edentatus'' and ''S. equinus'' confined to roomy tissues (e.g. mesentery, liver) |
| + | |
| + | ==== Verminous endarteritis ==== |
| + | *Caused by larvae of ''S. vulgaris'' within the cranial mesenteric artery |
| + | *Also called "verminous aneurism" (misnomer as aneurism = dilatation/thinning of blood vessel wall; also, aneurisms are rare) |
| + | *Wall of artery grossly thickened (organising thrombi, inflammatory responses) |
| + | *Can be detected on rectal palpation |
| + | *Many cases asymptomatic |
| + | *May get embolism → infarction of areas of intestinal wall → colic or chronic ulceration (note: generally good collateral circulation; therefore colic is not inevitable) |
| + | *Aberrant larvae may cause thrombosis in other arteries; e.g. iliac, cerebral, coronary |
| + | *Avermectin/milbemycins or fenbendazole are used to control migrating ''S. vulgaris'' larvae |
| + | |
| + | |
| + | === Small strongyles (Cyathostomins) === |
| + | ==== Morphology ==== |
| + | '''Gross''': |
| + | *Small worms, <1.5cm long |
| + | *Small, shallow buccal capsule |
| + | |
| + | '''Microscopic''': |
| + | *Buccal capsule shape |
| + | *Double row of leaf crowns |
| + | *Teeth may be present |
| + | |
| + | ==== Life-cycle ==== |
| + | *Infection by ingestion of L3 |
| + | *Larvae invade mucosa of large intestine |
| + | *Larvae may develop to L4 without interruption |
| + | *Cyathostomin larvae can arrest at EL3 stage |
| + | *L4 emerge into gut lumen and mature to adult worms |
| + | *Prepatent period 8-12 weeks (depending on species) |
| + | |
| + | ==== Pathogenicity ==== |
| + | '''General''': |
| + | *Adult and larval worms are plug feeders, restricting the damage to more superficial mucosa |
| + | |
| + | '''Cyathostominosis''': |
| + | *Initial infection (L3) → local inflammatory response |
| + | *Developing L4s can be seen as brown flecks in the mucosa |
| + | *They can be present in very large numbers (→ the so-called "pepper-pot lesion") |
| + | *Larval emergence throughout '''summer/autumn''' and plug-feeding of adults → major contributor to the "wormy" horse: |
| + | **Unthriftiness |
| + | **Poor coat |
| + | **Anaemia |
| + | **Diarrhoea) |
| + | *May be tens or hundreds of thousands of adults and millions of mucosal larvae present |
| + | *Emergence of massive numbers of previously arrested larvae in '''late winter/early spring''' → massive inflammatory infiltration → serious disease characterised by severe diarrhoea and/or weight loss (larval or Type 2 cyathostominosis) |
| + | |
| + | |
| + | === General epidemiology of large and small strongyles === |
| + | '''Strongylosis occurs in''' |
| + | *Young horses |
| + | *Adult animals (especially if overcrowding, poor hygiene) |
| + | *Animals on permanent pasture |
| + | |
| + | '''Sources of infection''' |
| + | *Overwintered L3 on pasture |
| + | *Many adult horses pass significant numbers of strongyle eggs throughout their lives |
| + | *"Spring rise" in faecal egg output occurs in both breeding and non-breeding horses |
| + | |
| + | '''Pattern of infection on pasture''' |
| + | *Pattern of L3 on pasture is similar to gastrointestinal worms in cattle |
| + | *Main difference is that the mare makes a major contribution to pasture contamination (c.f. cow) |
| + | |
| + | '''Hypobiosis of cyathostomin larvae''' |
| + | *Occurs throughout the year, but particularly in '''late summer/autumn''' |
| + | *EL3 may remain arrested for years |
| + | *Resumption of normal development can occur |
| + | **seasonally in '''late winter/early spring''' |
| + | **following removal of adult worm population via anthelmintic treatment |
| + | |
| + | ==== Larval cyathostominosis ==== |
| + | *Sudden onset diarrhoea and/or weight-loss |
| + | *Diagnosis difficult, prognosis guarded |
| + | *Generally in '''late winter/spring''' |
| + | *Usually <5 years old |
| + | *Sporadic, but increasing in incidence |
| + | *Hyperglobulinaemia, especially IgG(T) |
| + | *Hypoalbuminaemia |
| + | *Leukocytosis |
| + | *Sometimes peripheral oedema |
| + | *Faecal egg-count low (disease caused by emerging larvae) |
| + | *Larvae may be found in faeces or on faecal glove |
| + | |
| + | ==== Pathogenesis ==== |
| + | Resumed development of massive numbers of larvae → subsequent emergence of bright red L4 → massive eosinophilic infiltration of mucosa → catarrhal and haemorrhagic colitis |
| + | |
| + | ==== Control of cyathostomin infections in horses ==== |
| + | '''Anthelmintics''' |
| + | *Only 3 chemical groups currently available |
| + | **Avermectin/milbemycins |
| + | **Benzimidazoles |
| + | **Pyrantel |
| + | *Resistance is an emerging problem (especially to benzimidazoles) |
| + | |
| + | '''Target life-cycle stages''' |
| + | *These are not all equally susceptible to each anthelmintic |
| + | *Pyrantel is affective against |
| + | **Adult worms in the lumen |
| + | *Ivermectin or a one off administration of Fenbendazole is affective against |
| + | **Adult worms and L4 in the lumen |
| + | *Moxidectin or a 5 day course of Fenbendazole is affective against |
| + | **Adult worms and L4 in the lumen |
| + | **Developing and hypobiotic L3 in the mucosa |
| + | |
| + | '''Egg reappearance period''' |
| + | *This is the time from treatment until eggs reappear in the faeces. It is determined by |
| + | **degree of activity against mucosal larval stages |
| + | **persistency of anthelmintic treatment |
| + | |
| + | '''Prevention of pasture contamination''' |
| + | *The objective is to create safe grazing by preventing depostion of strongyle eggs onto pasture |
| + | *Treat all grazing horses at intervals determined by |
| + | **Egg reappearance time of chosen anthelmintic |
| + | **Risk level |
| + | *Treat all new arrivals and stable for 48-72 hours so that eggs are not passed onto pasture |
| + | *Adopt strategy that will minimise risk of resistance developing (you may need to include tapeworm and stomach bots in your scheme) |
| + | *No new eggs passed → no new L3 developing, however it is important to use epidemiological knowledge to predict how long existing L3 will survive as the pasture will not be safe for use before then |
| + | *Remove faeces from paddocks at least weekly: |
| + | **This markedly reduces dependence on anthelmintics |
| + | **Increases available grazing |
| + | **But is labour intensive and less effective in rainy weather |
| + | *Examine faecal samples twice yearly to monitor effectiveness of your chosen strategy |
| + | |
| + | '''Pasture management''' |
| + | *Reserve clean grazing for nursing mares and foals |
| + | *Rest pastures used the previous year until overwintered L3 have gone |
| + | *Mixed or alternate grazing with cattle or sheep |
| + | **These are refractory to most horse worms, except ''T.axei'' |
| + | |
| + | '''Chemoprophylaxis of larval cyathostominosis''' |
| + | *Needed if a horse is known to have grazed heavily contaminated pasture and may therefore be harbouring massive numbers of hypobiotic larvae |
| + | *Fenbendazole treatment given daily for 5 consecutive days in autumn or winter will reduce the risk of clinical disease developing. |
| | | |
| [[Category:Nematodes]][[Category:Horse]] | | [[Category:Nematodes]][[Category:Horse]] |