Healthcare Reminder: Equine Summer Sores
The summer weather is here! With the humid weather, pesky flies are at their worst, which creates problems for many horse owners often leading to summer sores, medically known as Habronemiasis.
What are Summer Sores?
Summer sores are lesions on the skin caused by the larvae of equine stomach worms Habronema. These worms in the horseās stomach produce eggs that pass through the digestive tract and are shed in the horseās feces. Barn flies typically gather around manure and ultimately collect the parasiteās larvae on their extremities. Summer sores will occur when flies carrying the larvae deposit the eggs onto an open wound or the mucous membranes of a horse. The larvae infect the open wound or mucous membranes, causing an inflammatory reaction including symptoms of inflammation, discharge, and the production of granulation tissue infected with larvae.
Detecting Summer Sores
One way to detect a summer sore is the visible granulation of tissue containing small yellow, rice-like larvae within the skin and a mucopurulent (mucus or pus-like) discharge associated with the wound. Prevention is the most effective way of controlling summer sore outbreaks and the best way to protect horses is to implement effective methods for:
- fly control
- manure removal
- proper wound care
- an effective de-worming program
A diligent de-worming program is the most important element of prevention because effective de-wormer disrupts the parasiteās life cycle internally. The key is to kill both adult worms in the stomach and the larvae that form in the skin tissue.
Treating Summer Sores
For treatment of summer sores themselves, corticosteroids are administered to reduce the inflammatory hypersensitivity reaction, and antimicrobials treat any secondary infections that may develop as the result of an open wound. If not treated properly, summer sores can last up to several months and possibly require a costly surgical procedure to remove the granulated tissue and larvae. At the first sign of a summer sore, contact your veterinarian at Palm Beach Equine Clinic at 561-793-1599 to discuss treatment and develop an effective fly-management program for your barn.