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Answers to the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Horse Feeding and Management Practices to Reduce the Risk of Atypical Myopathy

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Equine atypical myopathy is a severe intoxication of grazing equids resulting from the ingestion of samaras or seedlings of trees from the Acer species. The sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus) is involved in European cases whereas the box elder (Acer negundo) is recognized as the ca...

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Autores principales: Votion, Dominique-Marie, François, Anne-Christine, Kruse, Caroline, Renaud, Benoit, Farinelle, Arnaud, Bouquieaux, Marie-Catherine, Marcillaud-Pitel, Christel, Gustin, Pascal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7071031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32102384
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10020365
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author Votion, Dominique-Marie
François, Anne-Christine
Kruse, Caroline
Renaud, Benoit
Farinelle, Arnaud
Bouquieaux, Marie-Catherine
Marcillaud-Pitel, Christel
Gustin, Pascal
author_facet Votion, Dominique-Marie
François, Anne-Christine
Kruse, Caroline
Renaud, Benoit
Farinelle, Arnaud
Bouquieaux, Marie-Catherine
Marcillaud-Pitel, Christel
Gustin, Pascal
author_sort Votion, Dominique-Marie
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Equine atypical myopathy is a severe intoxication of grazing equids resulting from the ingestion of samaras or seedlings of trees from the Acer species. The sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus) is involved in European cases whereas the box elder (Acer negundo) is recognized as the cause of this seasonal pasture myopathy in the Unites States of America. In Europe, young and inactive animals with a thin to normal body condition and no feed supplementation, except for hay in autumn, are at higher risk. The risk is also associated with full time pasturing in a humid environment. Indeed, dead leaves piling up in autumn as well as, the presence of trees and/or woods presumably exposes the horses to the sycamore maple. This manuscript answers the most frequently asked questions arising from the equine field about feeding and management of equines to reduce the risk of atypical myopathy. All answers are based on data collected from 2006 to 2019 by the “Atypical Myopathy Alert Group” (AMAG, Belgium) and the “Réseau d’épidémiosurveillance en Pathologie équine” (RESPE, France) as well as on a review of the most recent literature. ABSTRACT: In 2014, atypical myopathy (AM) was linked to Acer pseudoplatanus (sycamore maple) in Europe. The emergence of this seasonal intoxication caused by a native tree has raised many questions. This manuscript aims at answering the five most frequently asked questions (FAQs) regarding (1) identification of toxic trees; reduction of risk at the level of (2) pastures and (3) equids; (4) the risk associated with pastures with sycamores that have always been used without horses being poisoned and (5) the length of the risk periods. Answers were found in a literature review and data gathered by AM surveillance networks. A guide is offered to differentiate common maple trees (FAQ1). In order to reduce the risk of AM at pasture level: Avoid humid pastures; permanent pasturing; spreading of manure for pasture with sycamores in the vicinity and avoid sycamore maple trees around pasture (FAQ2). To reduce the risk of AM at horse level: Reduce pasturing time according to weather conditions and to less than six hours a day during risk periods for horses on risk pasture; provide supplementary feeds including toxin-free forage; water from the distribution network; vitamins and a salt block (FAQ3). All pastures with a sycamore tree in the vicinity are at risk (FAQ4). Ninety-four percent of cases occur over two 3-month periods, starting in October and in March, for cases resulting from seeds and seedlings ingestion, respectively (FAQ5).
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spelling pubmed-70710312020-03-19 Answers to the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Horse Feeding and Management Practices to Reduce the Risk of Atypical Myopathy Votion, Dominique-Marie François, Anne-Christine Kruse, Caroline Renaud, Benoit Farinelle, Arnaud Bouquieaux, Marie-Catherine Marcillaud-Pitel, Christel Gustin, Pascal Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Equine atypical myopathy is a severe intoxication of grazing equids resulting from the ingestion of samaras or seedlings of trees from the Acer species. The sycamore maple (Acer pseudoplatanus) is involved in European cases whereas the box elder (Acer negundo) is recognized as the cause of this seasonal pasture myopathy in the Unites States of America. In Europe, young and inactive animals with a thin to normal body condition and no feed supplementation, except for hay in autumn, are at higher risk. The risk is also associated with full time pasturing in a humid environment. Indeed, dead leaves piling up in autumn as well as, the presence of trees and/or woods presumably exposes the horses to the sycamore maple. This manuscript answers the most frequently asked questions arising from the equine field about feeding and management of equines to reduce the risk of atypical myopathy. All answers are based on data collected from 2006 to 2019 by the “Atypical Myopathy Alert Group” (AMAG, Belgium) and the “Réseau d’épidémiosurveillance en Pathologie équine” (RESPE, France) as well as on a review of the most recent literature. ABSTRACT: In 2014, atypical myopathy (AM) was linked to Acer pseudoplatanus (sycamore maple) in Europe. The emergence of this seasonal intoxication caused by a native tree has raised many questions. This manuscript aims at answering the five most frequently asked questions (FAQs) regarding (1) identification of toxic trees; reduction of risk at the level of (2) pastures and (3) equids; (4) the risk associated with pastures with sycamores that have always been used without horses being poisoned and (5) the length of the risk periods. Answers were found in a literature review and data gathered by AM surveillance networks. A guide is offered to differentiate common maple trees (FAQ1). In order to reduce the risk of AM at pasture level: Avoid humid pastures; permanent pasturing; spreading of manure for pasture with sycamores in the vicinity and avoid sycamore maple trees around pasture (FAQ2). To reduce the risk of AM at horse level: Reduce pasturing time according to weather conditions and to less than six hours a day during risk periods for horses on risk pasture; provide supplementary feeds including toxin-free forage; water from the distribution network; vitamins and a salt block (FAQ3). All pastures with a sycamore tree in the vicinity are at risk (FAQ4). Ninety-four percent of cases occur over two 3-month periods, starting in October and in March, for cases resulting from seeds and seedlings ingestion, respectively (FAQ5). MDPI 2020-02-24 /pmc/articles/PMC7071031/ /pubmed/32102384 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10020365 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Votion, Dominique-Marie
François, Anne-Christine
Kruse, Caroline
Renaud, Benoit
Farinelle, Arnaud
Bouquieaux, Marie-Catherine
Marcillaud-Pitel, Christel
Gustin, Pascal
Answers to the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Horse Feeding and Management Practices to Reduce the Risk of Atypical Myopathy
title Answers to the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Horse Feeding and Management Practices to Reduce the Risk of Atypical Myopathy
title_full Answers to the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Horse Feeding and Management Practices to Reduce the Risk of Atypical Myopathy
title_fullStr Answers to the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Horse Feeding and Management Practices to Reduce the Risk of Atypical Myopathy
title_full_unstemmed Answers to the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Horse Feeding and Management Practices to Reduce the Risk of Atypical Myopathy
title_short Answers to the Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Horse Feeding and Management Practices to Reduce the Risk of Atypical Myopathy
title_sort answers to the frequently asked questions regarding horse feeding and management practices to reduce the risk of atypical myopathy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7071031/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32102384
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani10020365
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