News
Release
Texas Animal
Health Commission
Box 12966
• Austin, Texas 78711 • (800) 550-8242 • FAX (512) 719-071
Bob Hillman,
DVM • Executive Director
For info,
contact Carla Everett, information officer, at 1-800-550-8242, ext. 710,
or ceverett@tahc.state.tx.us
For Immediate
Release---
And Now
There are Three…
Texas Joins
States with Vesicular Stomatitis in 2005
Texas, on
Friday, May 20, joined New Mexico and Arizona as states with confirmed
cases of vesicular stomatitis (VS) this spring. Two Travis County
horses were hauled home May 10 from a trail ride in Arizona, where they
apparently were exposed to the virus that can cause animals to develop
blisters and sores in the mouth, on the tongue, muzzle, teats and hooves.
The year’s first VS cases were confirmed April 27 in two horses in southwest
New Mexico. Since then, infection has been detected in 17 horses
on 11 premises in New Mexico, Arizona, and now, Texas.
“A number of
states and countries impose strict testing, permitting and inspection requirements
for livestock that originate from VS-affected areas or states. Check
with the state or country of destination before hauling livestock from
Texas,” said Dr. Bob Hillman, head of the Texas Animal Health Commission
(TAHC), the state’s livestock and poultry health regulatory agency.
Phone numbers for other states’ animal health regulatory agencies can be
obtained from the TAHC’s Austin headquarters at 1-800-550-8242. Staff at
the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Austin office can be reached at 512-916-5565
for international shipping rules or restrictions.
“VS rarely
causes death, but an animal can suffer several weeks, while the lesions
heal,” said Dr. Bob Hillman, who also serves as Texas’ state veterinarian.
“To help prevent the spread of VS, an infected animal and the other livestock
on a premises are quarantined until at least 30 days after the sores heal.
Prior to releasing movement restrictions, a regulatory veterinarian will
examine the affected animal to ensure healing is complete. Other
livestock also will be checked. If infection is detected, the quarantine
will begin anew.”
Dr. Hillman
explained that the clinical signs of VS mirror those of the dreaded foreign
foot-and-mouth (FMD) disease. Horses are susceptible to VS, but not
FMD; however, both diseases can affect cattle, sheep, goats, swine, deer
and a number of other species. “When sores or blisters are seen in
FMD-susceptible animals, we must immediately rule out an introduction of
foot-and-mouth disease (FMD). When horses have lesions, a VS test rules
out other possible causes for blisters and sores, including toxic plants,
chemicals or poison. Tests are run at no charge to the animal owner,
and the VS diagnosis in horses is confirmed at the National Veterinary
Services Laboratory (NVSL) in Ames, IA.”
Dr. Hillman
noted that the disease occurs sporadically, but outbreaks generally follow
a 10- to 15-year cycle. In l982-83, the country suffered its worst
recorded VS outbreak, when infection was confirmed on 617 premises in nine
states: Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska
and South Dakota.
Subsequent
outbreaks in l995, l997 and l998 were limited to New Mexico, Colorado and
Texas, with a few cases in Arizona. Last year, Arizona was
"spared,” when Texas had 15 VS cases, New Mexico had 80, and Colorado,
199.
Livestock owners
and private veterinary practitioners are urged to report suspected cases
of VS to their respective state's livestock health regulatory agency:
Texas Animal
Health Commission -- 1-800-550-8242 (operational 24 hours a day)
New Mexico
Livestock Board --
1-505-841-6161
Colorado Department
of Agriculture, State Veterinarian's Office -- 1-303-239-4161
Arizona Department
of Agriculture, State Veterinarian's Office -- 1-602-542-4293
The TAHC’s web
site at http://www.tahc.state.tx.us has additional information on VS and
a link to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, where situation reports,
maps and movement restrictions and requirements are posted.
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