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Sweet itch
Sweet Itch can be the bane of many horse’s lives throughout the spring
and summer months. If you have a horse or pony that suffers from
sweet itch, there’s actually quite a lot you can do to help.
Here follows the Wright & Morten guide to this disease;
What is sweet itch?
Basically
it’s an allergic skin disease. Certain horses are allergic to the
saliva in the bite of a species of midge called Culicoides. This
means that once a sensitive horse is bitten by a Culicoides fly, it will
have an allergic reaction at the site of the bite. This will cause a
localised irritation which the horse will try and rub. Self-
inflicted damage will occur as the horse itches himself.
Flies
Due
to the life cycle of the flies in question, this is a seasonal disease,
occurring only between April and October. It is characterised by
itchiness, which can be severe. The horse may be restless, keep
rubbing himself against trees or fences, and keep swishing his tail in an
effort to keep the flies away.
There are many different species of Culicoides midge, and each one prefers
to bite a different part of the horse. The horse will then itch the
area around where the fly has bitten. Most common are the “dorsal
feeders” who bite, and cause damage around the horses ears, poll, mane,
withers, rump, and tail head. The “ventral feeders” are less
common, and tend to cause the itching around the horse’s face, chest,
and belly.
Signs of disease
Constant
rubbing will cause hair loss over the affected area, often the mane and
rump. Early on in the disease, the skin will be bald, red, inflamed,
crusting and sore. As the disease progresses, the skin becomes
chronically thickened, blackened, and wrinkled and the hair becomes sparse
and coarse. The tail takes on a characteristic rat-tailed
appearance. Over the winter, a horse may totally heal, only for the
disease to come back in the spring at the first contact with flies.
Treatment
There
are three separate approaches here. Firstly, and most importantly,
you need to decrease your horse’s exposure to the Culicoides flies.
Secondly, we need to kill the flies that do attack your horse, and thirdly
we need to stop the horse itching.
Fly control
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Best
begun before the start of the fly season.
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Insect-proof
stables using fine-mesh screens.
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Use
ceiling or wall mounted fans in stables to create a breeze – flies
will find it harder to land on the horse.
-
Stable
horses one hour each side of sunrise and sunset, as this is when flies
are most active.
-
Stabling
at night may also help.
-
Try
using commercially available sheets and hoods to rug the horse with
when he is turned out.
-
Culicoides
flies breed around ponds and marshes, but do not fly more than a few
hundred metres from their breeding areas. Moving horses farther
than half a mile from such areas should dramatically reduce fly
exposure.
-
Improve
pasture drainage to prevent fly breeding.
-
Similarly,
clean the water trough regularly to prevent flies breeding here.
Insecticides
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Insecticides
containing pyrethrins or pyrethroids are best. Treatment may
have to be applied weekly or fortnightly in worst affected cases.
-
We
recommend (and supply) the pour-on preparation ‘Switch’.
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Insect
repellents, such as benzyl benzoate, will keep flies away, but need to
be constantly reapplied.
Anti-allergy treatment
Corticosteroids
remain the most useful product for treating the skin allergy. As
steroids do have side-effects in horses, they must only be prescribed by a
vet. They are very potent anti-inflammatories which will stop the
itching and allow the skin to heal.
Anti-histamines are not as useful in the horse as they are in man.
They tend to be very expensive, and often not particularly effective.
The National Sweet Itch helpline has a web site for further information
- www.sweet-itch.com
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