Windy weather increases risk of rare eye infection in horses

High winds may lead to corneal trauma that allows equine ulcerative keratomycosis to develop.

Research from Colorado State University suggests that high winds may contribute to the development of a potentially devastating fungal eye infection in horses.

Close up of a white horee's eye overlaid with an illustration suggesting wind.
the only environmental factor found to have a significant statistical correlation with the development of Equine ulcerative keratomycosis was wind speed,

Equine ulcerative keratomycosis (EUK) typically develops after trauma causes an ulcer or another defect in the cornea, the transparent layer of tissue that covers the front of the eye. In addition to pain and excessive tearing, EUK may lead to vision loss. In severe cases, surgical removal of the eyeball may be necessary.

To investigate whether ambient temperatures, humidity, wind speed and other environmental factors influence the development of EUK, the researchers reviewed the case files of 61 horses seen at the CSU hospital for corneal ulceration over a 15-year period. In 10 of the study horses, an EUK diagnosis was confirmed based on laboratory tests.

Analysis of those cases revealed that the highest prevalence of EUK cases occurred during two seasons, with 50 percent of the cases diagnosed in the spring and 40 percent in the fall. Only one EUK case was reported in summer, and none occurred during winter.

Despite the seasonal variations, the only environmental factor found to have a significant statistical correlation with the development of EUK was wind speed, with higher gusts correlated to greater rates of diagnosis. The researchers say this can be attributed to micro-traumas caused when airborne dust particles or vegetative fragments contaminated with fungus 

Don’t miss out! With the free weekly EQUUS newsletter, you’ll get the latest horse health information delivered right to your in basket! If you’re not already receiving the EQUUS newsletter, click here to sign up. It’s *free*!

CATEGORIES

TAGS

SHARE THIS STORY

Related Posts

edit 2
Antibiotics & your horse: What you should know
Gray horse head in profile on EQ Extra 89 cover
What we’ve learned about PPID
COVER EQ_EXTRA-VOL88
Do right by your retired horse
COVER EQ_EXTRA-VOL87
Tame your horse’s anxiety

NEWSLETTER

"*" indicates required fields

Name*
Country*

Additional Offers

Additional Offers
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.