Meticillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infections have been confirmed in hospitalised Thoroughbred racehorses at the hospitals of two training centres in Japan since 2009. To investigate the source of infection, the authors examined the rate of nasal MRSA colonisation in 600 healthy Thoroughbred racehorses, 53 veterinarians and 16 office staff at the racehorse hospitals of the two training centres. MRSA was not isolated from healthy Thoroughbred racehorses or hospital office staff. However, MRSA was isolated from 16 veterinarians (30.1 per cent), and the colonisation rate was significantly higher in veterinarians than in the office staff of the same hospitals. Also, 10 of the 16 MRSA strains (62.5 per cent) isolated from veterinarians were classified as type II by staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (SCCmec) typing and ST5 by multilocus sequence typing. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis analysis demonstrated that these 10 MRSA strains of SCCmec type II and ST5 were genetically identical or very similar to 9 MRSA strains isolated from infected horses hospitalised at these hospitals between 2009 and 2013. These results indicate that SCCmec type II and ST5 MRSA strains were probably transmitted between veterinarians and infected horses.
Desmitis of the oblique distal sesamoidean ligaments (ODSL) is caused by hyperextension
of the metacarpophalangeal/metatarsophalangeal joint and has been described as a
significant cause of lameness in racehorses. In this study, three Thoroughbred racehorses
(age range: 3–6 years) were diagnosed with desmitis of the forelimb ODSL using standing
low-field magnetic resonance imaging (sMRI). Radiography and ultrasonography were
inconclusive with regard to a definitive diagnosis. For all horses, the sMRI
characteristics included increased signal intensity within the medial ODSL on T1-weighted
gradient echo, T2-weighted fast spin echo and short tau inversion recovery fast spin echo
images, which use a fat suppression technique. Effusion of the digital flexor tendon
sheath was also clearly visible on sMRI. Following rest and controlled exercise for
roughly 3 months, two horses successfully returned to racing within 5 months. Our findings
support the use of sMRI for diagnosing ODSL injuries in Thoroughbred racehorses.
Although hyperglycemia at admission with colic has been reported to have a poor prognosis, there is no report specifically about acute colitis with systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) in horses. In this
study, we measured blood glucose (Glu), insulin (Ins), and cortisol (Cor) levels in 17 Thoroughbred racehorses diagnosed as having acute colitis with SIRS, and examined the relationship between time-dependent changes in
Glu, Ins, and Cor and prognosis. Glu levels were high in 3 horses at admission, but thereafter no horses had persistently high Glu levels. There was no significant difference in Glu, Ins, and Cor levels within 72 hr
between surviving and non-surviving horses. In conclusion, the Glu level is unlikely to be a useful prognostic biomarker in acute colitis with SIRS.
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