Saskatoon

Horse herpes confirmed near Saskatoon

A stable near Saskatoon is under voluntary quarantine after a case of equine herpes virus 1 was confirmed in a horse.

Boarding stable under voluntary quarantine

Sunny, the five-year-old American Quarter Horse, has been quarantined after contracting the equine herpes virus 1. (Submitted by Alyssa Gartner)

A stable near Saskatoon is under voluntary quarantine after a case of equine herpes virus 1 was confirmed in a horse.

"If we can put it out there and be open and honest about it, it helps educate the whole horse community and helps everybody to make good, appropriate decisions to stay home for a bit or to check their horses' temperatures and kind of be on top of it a bit more," said Alyssa Gartner, the owner of the infected horse.

It's more common than people want to admit- Alyssa Gartner

"I kind of thought at first that she was a bit sore or tender," she said of her five-year-old American Quarter Horse, Sunny. "I was leading her around the arena and I really noticed her dragging her toes and being really wobbly ... and something in me just said it was something more than she was sore or had a long ride." 

That's when Gartner immediately took Sunny to the vet. 

The horse is now receiving supportive care and has been put in isolation. Clinicians from the Western College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan are working closely with the stable to monitor the case, according to a release from the college.

What is EHV-1?
Alyssa Gartner with her five-year-old American Quarter Horse, Sunny. (Submitted by Alyssa Gartner)

EHV-1 cannot be transmitted to humans or most animal species, but the virus is highly contagious among horses. It's spread through direct contact or indirect contact such as contaminated equipment.

If a horse has EHV-1, it can lead to fever, coughing, nasal discharge, and there may be abnormalities or death in foals that are infected before being born.

It can also lead to equine herpes myeloenephalopathy, which is a neurologic disease impacting the hind limbs and urinary tract.

"It's more common than people want to admit," said Gartner, adding that Sunny is expected to make a full recovery.

"We're going to get it under wraps as quick as the virus will let us."