Outbreak of Equine Herpes Virus - 1
Posted: Wed Feb 28, 2007 1:00 pm
From a friend....
From: David Roseman [mailto:david.roseman@...]
Subject: Equine Herpes Virus-1 update
Hello All -- I'm circulating this to a few friends who for one
reason or another might have a particular interest in its content.
Feel free to further circulate it as you wish. Last night I
attended a hurriedly-scheduled public meeting in Leesburg, VA on the
recent Equine Herpes Virus, Strain 1, outbreak in Virginia and
Maryland. The meeting was sponsored by the Marion Scott DuPont
Equine Medical Center at Morven Park and the Virginia Dept. of
Agriculture. It went for 2-1/2 hrs and was quite worthwhile. The
Virginia and Maryland State Veterinarians (Rich Wilkes and Guy
Hohenhaus) were there, together with numerous vets from the EMC,
including Dr. Nat White (Director) and Drs. Martin Furr and Harold
McKenzie. Dr. Hohenhaus has had a good deal of experience with
outbreaks, as this is the same virus that created problems at the
race tracks and training barns in Maryland a year or so ago. The
problem was first noticed at the Equine Medical Center with
symptoms presenting on February 7. The EMC is completely shut down
and is reeling from this. Dr. White said that they scheduled the
meeting in an attempt to get the correct facts out, amid gossip and
rumors that have been reporting (incorrectly) multiple horse deaths.
The meeting had a standing-room-only crowd. People are taking this
very seriously because so much is still unknown about EHV-1, and
testing is still ongoing. Ten farms in Virginia have been
quarantined as "contact farms", meaning that horses there can trace
potential exposure back to the active cases at EMC. Two farms in
Fauquier Count, one in Culpepper Co., six in Loudon and one in
Stafford County (at the Marine Base in Quantico). Two horses are
exhibiting neurological symptoms consistent with EHV-1, but the
results from the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test to confirm EHV-
1 have not yet been returned. Six farms in Maryland are
quarantined. There has been one local death confirmed due to EHV-1,
a horse that had been at EMC and returned to Harford County, MD that
was put down last week.
I am attaching a copy of the handout prepared yesterday by the EMC
on EHV. Note that the most serious of the four types is EHV-1,
which presents with neurological problems. The statement in the
first paragraph that 70% of adult horses may have the latent virus
in their system refers to all four types, not the most virulent EHV-
1, so it is a bit misleading. That was clarified during the Q & A
session at the meeting, which was spirited to say the least.
A couple of people in the audience said that the Master of Foxhounds
Association has just ordered that all foxhunting in Virginia and
Maryland be suspended immediately. I don't know anything more on
that, but assume it is correct.
We have cancelled the Conestoga Vizsla Club Spring field trial at
Summerduck, VA that was scheduled for March 9-11. A no-brainer
really, given the consequences if we guessed wrong on risk. Old
Dominion Vizsla Club and Central Va. GSP have just cancelled as
well. Don't know if Rappahannock Brittany will cancel, but I will
be surprised if the risk has been resolved by then. They are the
fourth in the back-to-back pointing-breed series of Spring AKC FTs
at the C.F. Phelps WMA at Summerduck.
From: David Roseman [mailto:david.roseman@...]
Subject: Equine Herpes Virus-1 update
Hello All -- I'm circulating this to a few friends who for one
reason or another might have a particular interest in its content.
Feel free to further circulate it as you wish. Last night I
attended a hurriedly-scheduled public meeting in Leesburg, VA on the
recent Equine Herpes Virus, Strain 1, outbreak in Virginia and
Maryland. The meeting was sponsored by the Marion Scott DuPont
Equine Medical Center at Morven Park and the Virginia Dept. of
Agriculture. It went for 2-1/2 hrs and was quite worthwhile. The
Virginia and Maryland State Veterinarians (Rich Wilkes and Guy
Hohenhaus) were there, together with numerous vets from the EMC,
including Dr. Nat White (Director) and Drs. Martin Furr and Harold
McKenzie. Dr. Hohenhaus has had a good deal of experience with
outbreaks, as this is the same virus that created problems at the
race tracks and training barns in Maryland a year or so ago. The
problem was first noticed at the Equine Medical Center with
symptoms presenting on February 7. The EMC is completely shut down
and is reeling from this. Dr. White said that they scheduled the
meeting in an attempt to get the correct facts out, amid gossip and
rumors that have been reporting (incorrectly) multiple horse deaths.
The meeting had a standing-room-only crowd. People are taking this
very seriously because so much is still unknown about EHV-1, and
testing is still ongoing. Ten farms in Virginia have been
quarantined as "contact farms", meaning that horses there can trace
potential exposure back to the active cases at EMC. Two farms in
Fauquier Count, one in Culpepper Co., six in Loudon and one in
Stafford County (at the Marine Base in Quantico). Two horses are
exhibiting neurological symptoms consistent with EHV-1, but the
results from the Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) test to confirm EHV-
1 have not yet been returned. Six farms in Maryland are
quarantined. There has been one local death confirmed due to EHV-1,
a horse that had been at EMC and returned to Harford County, MD that
was put down last week.
I am attaching a copy of the handout prepared yesterday by the EMC
on EHV. Note that the most serious of the four types is EHV-1,
which presents with neurological problems. The statement in the
first paragraph that 70% of adult horses may have the latent virus
in their system refers to all four types, not the most virulent EHV-
1, so it is a bit misleading. That was clarified during the Q & A
session at the meeting, which was spirited to say the least.
A couple of people in the audience said that the Master of Foxhounds
Association has just ordered that all foxhunting in Virginia and
Maryland be suspended immediately. I don't know anything more on
that, but assume it is correct.
We have cancelled the Conestoga Vizsla Club Spring field trial at
Summerduck, VA that was scheduled for March 9-11. A no-brainer
really, given the consequences if we guessed wrong on risk. Old
Dominion Vizsla Club and Central Va. GSP have just cancelled as
well. Don't know if Rappahannock Brittany will cancel, but I will
be surprised if the risk has been resolved by then. They are the
fourth in the back-to-back pointing-breed series of Spring AKC FTs
at the C.F. Phelps WMA at Summerduck.