|
Coggins Test | home
About Us | Trail Rides | Horses for sale | Tack Shop | My Horse | Contact us | News | Rodeo | Buying A Horse | Horse breeds | Miniature Horse Facts | Horse Breed& Color Codes | Poisonous Plants | Grooming | Equine Terminology | Fitting the Blanket | Horse Health | Horse's Vital Signs | Cribbing | Coggins Test | Strangles | Prevention of Colic | Common Internal Parasites | Laminitis | Equine First Aid Kit | Vaccination Schedule | Horse's Teeth | Teeth/Dental Care | Horse anatomy | Organs of the Horse | Muscles of the Horse | Horse Colors | Horses Hoof | Shoeing your Horse | Thrush | Winter Hoof Care | Trail Riding | Riding Preparation | Trailering | Riding | Horse Facts | Horse Tips | Horse Evolution | The Horse in History | The Horse in the Arts | Feeding your Horse | Feeding the Older Horse | Types of Feed | Broodmare Nutrition | Foaling Kit | Bathing Your Horse | Is your horse winter ready? | Horsemanship | Gaits of a Horse | Horse Behavior | Parts of a saddle | Selecting a Saddle | Styles of Riding | Haltering and Tying Horses | How to tie a quick release knot | Loading your Horse | Tying a Rope Halter | Horse treats | recipes | Just for Kids | Horse Drawings | Kids penpals | Horse Puzzles | Sim games links | Horse trivia | Caption contest | Horse polls | Horses New Year's Resolutions | What is a Cowboy? | Cowboy Poetry | Horse's Prayer | A Cowboy's Prayer | A Cowboy's Guide to Life | Horsey humor | Horsey quotes | A Horse by any other name | Horse Dreams | Horse Birthdays | Horse pictures | Horse Memorial | My awards-page 1 | Win my award | Horse Searches | Horse links | Banners | Link to us | webrings | Cool links | Clipart | Backgrounds | Bordered backgrounds | Bars | Buttons | Icons | Animations | Screensavers | Wallpaper | Greeting cards | Stationery | Affiliates | Free Stuff | Email | Chat | Message board | My dog "RAGS"
Coggins Test
Equine Infectious Anemia
understanding the importance of the Coggins Test
by Mark A. Crisman, D.V.M.
An EIA (Coggins) blood test is required on horses before most organized events, and for transporting a horse from one state to another. Nearly everyone has dealt with it, but many owners don't know exactly what it is.
The test is a check for equine infectious anemia, a contagious disease that affects horses worldwide. It is also known as "swamp fever" because of the higher incidence on the Gulf Coast of the United States, where increased humidity and temperature are favorable for transmission of the disease.
There is no treatment known to cure or eliminate the virus. Additionally, studies to develop an effective vaccine have been disappointing.
EIA is caused by a virus that was first identified in 1904. Although this disease has affected horses for a long time, researchers have recently grown more interested because the EIA virus is closely related to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).
EIA is transmitted primarily by bloodsucking insects. The horsefly is the most common. The large size and painful bites of these flies make it unlikely that a horse would permit them to complete a blood meal uninterrupted; by tail swishing or twitching, they send the biting fly on its way. This is the problem, however, because the virus is transmitted to other horses when the horsefly starts his meal on an infected horse and completes it on an uninfected one.
EIA has three common clinical forms.
In the acute or early form, the horse will be depressed, uncoordinated and feverish. Horses are rarely anemic during this stage. This phase may last several days and is the stage during which the horse is most likely to transmit the disease to nearby horses.
The second phase is characterized by weight loss, recurring fevers and general weakness. Anemia is likely to be present, and mares can abort during this stage.
If horses survive the first two stages, they enter the final or chronic stage, where they often appear normal. An owner may report that a horse is a poor keeper, and the animal may be mildly anemic. Infected mares can transmit the disease to their foals.
A horse infected with the EIA virus will be a carrier of the disease for life. Although horses in the chronic stage appear normal, they become ill again if subjected to stress, such as shipping or severe weather.
Carriers pose a health threat to the equine community. Since the early 1960's, several outbreaks of EIA have occurred at either race tracks or large breeding farms, resulting in the deaths of many horses.
The Coggins test, developed in the 1960's by Dr. Leroy Coggins, is based on the detection of antibodies in the horse's blood. Once a horse is infected with EIA the antibodies will be present in the blood for life. THE USDA does not have an eradication program for EIA--however, a national approved laboratory system has been established to perform the Coggins test.
Even if you don't show your horse, it should have an annual Coggins test. Horses that are shown or transported regularly may require more frequent testing.
Most states require that horses entering or being transported across their lines have a negative Coggins Test no more than six months old. Interstate transport of horses with a positive Coggins test is prohibited. Likewise, many horse shows and other events require a negative Coggins for your horse.
If a horse tests positive, strict quarantine measures are imposed. These include confinement in a screened stall and a 200-yard buffer from all other horses. Often, owners elect to euthanize their horses rather than subjecting them to such strict isolation.
Because of the relatively low incidence of EIA in the United States, most horse owners and veterinarians have decided that additional regulations are not necessary. Last year, 76,000 horses were tested in Kentucky, with 20 horses testing Coggins-positive. In Virginia, 40,000 were tested, with eight positives. Nevertheless, if you plan to buy a horse or board a horse, require either a recent negative Coggins from the owner, or isolate the horse until the test is performed.
|
||