Management Key to Preventing Heaves in Horses

August 3, 2009 Off By Roberta Johnston

Management Key to Preventing Heaves in Horses

On Behalf of the Equine Research Coordination Group

Heaves (also called recurrent airway obstruction) is a severe form of bronchitis/bronchiolitis. The airway passages of a horse with heaves are so obstructed by inflammation, mucus and bronchial muscle contraction (bronchospasm) that the animal has difficulty breathing even at rest. At the end of each exhalation, the horse pushes so hard with its abdominal muscles that with chronic overuse, these muscles enlarge and form a “heave line” that runs diagonally from the point of the hip forward to the lower edge of the ribs.

Horses with heaves first show signs when they are around eight years old. Signs include coughing and exercise intolerance and are more likely first observed when the affected horse is in closed environments such as a stable. The cough persists, and after one to two years the horse may show difficult breathing at rest. If the condition is untreated and management of the horse is not changed, airway obstruction becomes more severe and breathing becomes progressively more difficult. An affected horse loses weight because it cannot eat sufficient food when gasping for air and because it uses lots of muscular energy in the effort to breathe.

Heaves is classically a disease of horses that are in dusty environments with poor ventilation. Breathing dust particles that originate primarily in hay can cause airway inflammation. The important role played by the environment in the development of heaves has been known at least since 1640, when green grass was described as the best treatment for heaves in Britain. It was recognized during the 1800s that horses with heaves in New York City stables would become healthy if moved to an environment with clean air.

However, horses kept outdoors also can develop heaves. In the southern United States, a common heaves-like disease known as summer pasture-associated obstructive pulmonary disease appears to be due to inhalation of mold spores originating from pasture soil. Meanwhile, evidence of a genetic susceptibility of horses to chronic airway disease is accumulating. For example, the foal of two affected parents is more likely to develop chronic airway disease than the offspring of unaffected parents.

Diagnosis of heaves

Veterinarians generally diagnose heaves based on the clinical history of chronic coughing, exercise intolerance and the typical difficult breathing even at rest. Wheezing sounds in the lungs can be heard through a stethoscope or sometimes even by standing close to the horse’s nose. Heaves is differentiated from acute pneumonia by the absence of fever and by lack of increased numbers of inflammatory cells in the blood. An endoscopic examination of the air passages generally reveals accumulations of mucus within the bronchi and trachea. A sample of this mucus will contain numerous mature inflammatory cells known as neutrophils and no pathogenic bacteria.

Radiographs or ultrasound examination provide no additional diagnostic benefit but may be used to rule out other chronic lung diseases such as pulmonary fibrosis, chronic pneumonia and pleuritis, or tumors. Because heaves is thought to have an allergic basis, veterinarians may recommend testing to determine the cause of the allergy. These tests rarely identify the specific cause of the disease.

Environmental management

Decreasing the horse’s exposure to dust is essential to treat heaves and prevent progression of the disease. This can be done as follows:

. Allow horses continual access to pasture if possible.

. Remove access to hay and replace it with complete pelleted feed, soaked hay or other low-dust feed.

. Do not allow horses to eat hay from a round bale because they frequently burrow their faces in the bale and are exposed to high levels of dust.

. If the horse must be indoors, make sure its stall is well ventilated, even during winter.

. Feed horses from the floor to encourage mucus drainage.

. Adapt stable management to reduce dust exposure of susceptible horses by taking horses out of stalls when cleaning out, not using leaf blowers in stables, not leaving tractors idling in stables, sprinkling aisles with water before raking and keeping arena footing moist, and removing horses from the stable when removing cobwebs from rafters.

Unfortunately, a horse that is susceptible to heaves cannot be identified early in life. Possibly the advent of the equine genome will allow development of genetic tests that can achieve such a goal. At present, minimizing the horse’s exposure to dust is the best prevention.

Medications and other treatments

The two medications administered to horses with heaves are bronchodilators, which relax the smooth muscle around the air passages and make breathing easier, and corticosteroids, which reduce the severity of the inflammation. Medications can be administered by mouth, by injection or by inhalation.

It is important to realize that no medication cures heaves. Bronchodilators “rescue” a horse that has severe difficulty breathing so it can breathe easier until a better environment or a corticosteroid has reduced the severity of inflammation. Corticosteroids reduce inflammation but if the horse’s environment is not improved, the inflammation will return once corticosteroid administration ceases. Veterinarians are cautious in the use of corticosteroids because of their possible association with laminitis. However, if there is no concurrent problem such as Cushing’s disease, it is unusual for laminitis to develop during the treatment of heaves.

In people, allergic respiratory diseases such as hay fever are treated by desensitization, which involves multiple injections of small amounts of allergens into the skin over several months. Similar treatments have been used for heaves, but there have been no controlled trials to demonstrate their usefulness,

Numerous over-the-counter medications are used to treat heaves, but there are no data on their efficacy. It is always easy to convince oneself that these medications are beneficial because the severity of heaves comes and goes as the amount of dust in the stable or the pasture varies.

Long-term outlook

Once a horse has had heaves, it will always be susceptible to developing the symptoms. Heaves must be managed through decreasing exposure to dusts known to make the horse’s disease worse. However, the longer the horse remains in clinical remission, the less likely it will develop another severe bout. It is not yet known if changes in the horse’s air passages that are consequences of inflammation can ever be truly reversed even with environmental management or long-term treatment with corticosteroids.

Investigators are trying to understand why heaves-susceptible animals develop such severe airway inflammation when exposed to hay dust. Knowing this, it may be possible to identify a heaves-susceptible animal early in life and manage it to prevent the development of the disease.

By N. Edward Robinson, BVetMed, PhD, MRCVS,

Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, and

Melissa Millerick-May, BS, MS, PhD, Department of Medicine,

Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI

The veterinary community needs your assistance to increase funding for research on heaves and other equine diseases. Please contact the American Association of Equine Practitioners Foundation (www.aaepfoundation.org http://www.aaepfoundation.org/ ), the American Quarter Horse Foundation (www.aqha.com/foundation), Grayson Jockey-Club Research Foundation (www.grayson-jockeyclub.org http://www.grayson-jockeyclub.org/ ), Morris Animal Foundation (www.morrisanimalfoundation.org http://www.morrisanimalfoundation.org/ ) or your favorite veterinary school or research institution to make a contribution towards equine research.

This is just one of the many efforts that the AAEP Foundation is coordinating on behalf of the industry through the Equine Research Coordination Group (ERCG), which is comprised of researchers and organizations that support equine research. Formally organized in 2006, the ERCG has a mission of advancing the health and welfare of horses by promoting the discovery and sharing of new knowledge, enhancing awareness of the need for targeted research, educating the public, expanding fundraising opportunities and facilitating cooperation among funding agencies.

The ERCG is a group comprised of researchers and organizations that support equine research. Participants in the ERCG include equine foundations and multiple university research representatives. Current participants include: AAEP Foundation, American Horse Council, AQHA Foundation, Grayson-Jockey Club Research Foundation, Morris Animal Foundation, Havemeyer Foundation, United States Equestrian Federation Foundation and university researchers: Warwick Arden, BVSc, DVCS, MS, PhD, Dipl. ACVS (North Carolina State University); Rick Arthur, DVM; Noah Cohen, VMD, MPH, PhD, Dipl. ACVIM (Texas A & M University); Gregory Ferraro, DVM (University of California-Davis); Eleanor Green, DVM, DACVIM, DAVBP (Texas A & M University); Joan Hendricks, VMD, PhD, Dipl. ACVIM (University of Pennsylvania); Catherine Kohn, VMD, Dipl. ACVIM (The Ohio State University); C. Wayne McIlwraith, BVSc, PhD, DSc, FRCVS, Dipl. ACVS (Colorado State University); James Moore, DVM, PhD, Dipl. ACVS (University of Georgia); Rustin Moore, DVM, PhD, Dipl. ACVS (The Ohio State University); Grant Rezabek, DVM, MPH (Oklahoma State University); Corinne Sweeney, DVM, Dipl. ACVIM (University of Pennsylvania); Mats Troedsson, DVM, PhD, Dipl. ACT (University of Kentucky – M.H. Gluck Equine Research Center); and Nathaniel White II, DVM, MS, Dipl. ACVS (Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine).