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AHC Washington Update - Response from Secretary Vilsack and CEM Outbreak Update
Response
from Secretary Vilsack and CEM Outbreak Update Response
from Secretary Vilsack In
May 2009 the American Horse Council sent a letter to the U.S. Secretary of
Agriculture Tom Vilsack expressing our concern over the current outbreak of
Contagious Equine Metritis (CEM), and the need for the investigation to be
completed and for the CEM
Outbreak Update Since
the first discovery of a CEM positive stallion in December 2008, a total of 21
stallions (including one that is now a gelding) and five mares have been
confirmed as positive for CEM. None of the positive horses have yet been
identified as the source of the outbreak; the epidemiologic investigation
continues in an effort to determine the origin of this outbreak, but no
conclusions can yet be drawn. In
addition to the 21 positive stallions and 5 positive mares, another 960 horses
have been exposed to CEM. The total 986 horses have been found in 48 States. Of
the 272 stallions, 169 (62%) have now completed their entire testing and
treatment protocol and have been determined to be negative for CEM. Of the 169
that are now negative, 155 were exposed stallions and 14 were stallions that had
previously tested positive. Those 14 stallions, including 4 from Of
the 714 mares, a total of 640 (90%) have completed testing and treatment and are
negative for CEM; that total includes four formerly positive mares, two in
California and two in Illinois, that have completed their treatment and testing
protocols and are now negative. Overall,
809 (82%) of the 986 horses involved are now known to be free of CEM. Three of
the eight States that have had a positive horse, Georgia, Indiana, and Kentucky,
have completed testing and treatment of all known positive and exposed horses
and are considered free of CEM at this time. The
investigation of this outbreak has determined that all four of the positive The
positive Wisconsin mare was bred by the second positive stallion in What
is CEM? Contagious
Equine Metritis is a transmissible, venereal, foreign animal disease in horses
caused by a bacteria Taylorella equigenitalis. A CEM infection usually results
in infertility in mares and, on rare occasions, can cause mares to spontaneously
abort. Infected stallions exhibit no clinical signs. Stallions and mares can
become chronic carriers of CEM and be sources of infection for future outbreaks.
The transmission rate is high and naturally occurs by mating, but contaminated
instruments and equipment may be an indirect source of infecting horses. The
bacteria can also be spread via semen collected for artificial insemination. CEM
can be treated with disinfectants and antibiotics. CEM-positive mares, and mares
from CEM-positive countries, are required to go through a treatment protocol and
remain in quarantine for no less than 21 days. Stallions that have CEM or come
from a CEM-positive country are required to remain quarantined until a treatment
protocol is completed and they test negative for the disease. 1616
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