Intervet/Schering-Plough Animal Health announces the availability of
EquiRab™, a rabies vaccine designed specifically for horses. The new
vaccine for horses offers long-lasting protection against rabies in the
convenience of a single, low-dose injection.
“Just as it is for
dogs and cats, the potential for horse exposure to rabies justifies
vaccination,” says Craig Barnett, D.V.M., Intervet Senior Equine Technical
Services Veterinarian. “Although we don’t see a lot of clinical cases of rabies,
vaccination against the disease should not be overlooked — especially because it
is invariably fatal and has considerable public health
significance.”
Rabies Vaccine
Considered CoreThe American Association
of Equine Practitioners (AAEP) included rabies as a core vaccine in its recently
updated vaccination guidelines, which provide veterinarians with current
information and recommendations for vaccinating horses in their
care.
“AAEP’s recent adoption of rabies as a core vaccine reiterates the
significance of the disease as well as the efficacy and safety of vaccination,
which has been determined to exhibit a high enough level of patient benefit and
low enough level of risk to justify vaccination in the majority of horses,” says
Barnett.
The Rabies
Challenge
“While there only has
been a handful of equid rabies cases reported within the last couple years, the
number is increasing steadily. This is thought to be due in large part to the
urbanization of areas where the disease is endemic in the wildlife
population.”
Barnett says it is
not uncommon for pastured or stalled horses to be unknowingly exposed to
wildlife, and most of these incidences go unnoticed and most bite wounds are not
found.
The rabies virus attacks
the central nervous system of the horse and is very difficult to diagnose.
Barnett says there is no definitive test to diagnose rabies in a live animal,
further underscoring the need for preventive
vaccination.
“Rabies vaccination is
highly recommended,” says Barnett. “Clinical signs of equine rabies can mimic
many other neurological diseases in the horse. Concern for rabies in a horse
showing neurological signs can be somewhat minimized if the horse is known to
have been vaccinated.”
Proven Safe and
Effective
EquiRab is shown to
provide long-lasting 14-month protection and is proven safe for use in healthy
horses and foals 4-months of age or older. Field safety studies conducted by
veterinarians in three states show that 97.7 percent of the 992 horses
vaccinated with EquiRab had no injection site reactions or signs of adverse
effects.
EquiRab features Intervet/Schering-Plough Animal Health’s
proprietary adjuvant, Havlogen®, which aids in the consistency and
potency of the vaccine. It also helps stimulate a better immune response and
produces a booster effect for longer-lasting protection.
EquiRab is
aseptically injected intramuscularly. Annual revaccination is recommended. A
booster dose can be administered at more frequent intervals based upon
individual horse or farm disease risk assessment, or anytime epidemic conditions
exist or are reported.
EquiRab is available
through veterinarians. For more information about EquiRab and the full line of
Intervet equine products, contact Intervet Customer Service at 1-800-441-8272 or
visit
www.equirab.com or
www.intervetusa.com.
For more information
on the AAEP’s recently updated vaccination guidelines, visit
www.aaep.org/vaccination_guidelines.htm.