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Buying a Horse for Christmas? Be Sure
to Check for EIA First Planning to put a horse, donkey, mule
or other domestic equine animal under the tree this year? Make certain
you buy, trade for or are given an animal that has been tested negative
for equine infectious anemia (EIA).
Texas law requires that equine animals eight months of age or older have
a negative blood test for EIA, an incurable viral disease, within 12 months
prior to a change of ownership. (Nursing foals, transferred with their
tested dams, are exempt from the test.) The EIA test document, also known
as a VS 10-11, is sufficient proof of testing.
EIA can cause equine animals to develop severe anemia. Although some infected
animals exhibit no obvious clinical signs, others may become depressed,
exhausted, lose weight, or be unable to exercise or work. In acute cases,
the animal will die.
No EIA vaccine is approved in the U.S., so animals must be protected from
exposure to the virus. The disease is spread through blood-to-blood contact,
an event that can occur when biting flies feed on an infected equine animal,
then move to a nearby „clean‰ horse. Blood transfusions or
reusing contaminated needles or veterinary medical instruments also can
mechanically carry the virus from infected to clean animals.
The Texas Animal Health Commission (TAHC), the state‚s livestock
and poultry health regulatory agency, requires EIA-positive equine animals
to be euthanized, provided to a research facility, sold only for slaughter,
or maintained under quarantine for life, at least 200 yards from other
horses. Increased testing, movement controls for infected equine animals,
and greater disease awareness has helped control EIA in Texas. In l997,
750 EIA-infected animals were detected in the state; in 2005, as of early
December, about 40 EIA infected equine animals had been detected.
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