EIA Confirmed in Warren County, Iowa

One horse tested positive, and six have been exposed.
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warren county, Iowa
Officials confirmed that one horse at a private Warren County facility tested positive for equine infectious anemia (EIA) and six others have been exposed. | Wikimedia Commons
On April 14 Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship (IDALS) officials confirmed that one horse at a private Warren County facility tested positive for equine infectious anemia (EIA) and six others have been exposed. The premises are now under official quarantine.

About EIA

Equine infectious anemia is a viral disease that attacks horses’ immune systems. The virus is transmitted through the exchange of body fluids from an infected to an uninfected animal, often by blood-feeding insects such as horseflies. It can also be transmitted through the use of blood-contaminated instruments or needles.

Coggins test screens horses’ blood for antibodies that are indicative of the presence of the EIA virus. Most U.S. states require horses to have proof of a negative Coggins test to travel across state lines.

Once an animal is infected with EIA, it is infected for life and can be a reservoir for the spread of disease. Not all horses show signs of disease, but those that do can exhibit:

  • Progressive body condition loss;
  • Muscle weakness;
  • Poor stamina;
  • Fever;
  • Depression; and
  • Anemia.

EIA has no vaccine and no cure. A horse diagnosed with the disease dies, is euthanized, or must be placed under extremely strict quarantine conditions (at least 200 yards away from unaffected equids) for the rest of his life.

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