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Dechra announces “groundbreaking” strangles vaccine
"We are sure that the new strangles vaccine will be a vital tool in disease prevention and a huge benefit to the equestrian industry" - Sara Barker, Dechra.

Protein-based tool is available for horses and ponies.

Dechra Veterinary Products has announced a "groundbreaking" vaccine to protect horses and ponies against strangles.

Developed over 25 years, Strangvac is the first and only intramuscular vaccine for strangles - a highly contagious disease caused by the Streptococcus equi bacterium.

The new vaccine contains recombinant proteins from Streptococcus equi and features DIVA (Differentiating Infected from Vaccinated Animals) capability. It possesses no live bacteria or bacterial DNA, nor will it trigger a positive result in PCR or culture tests.

Strangvac is proven effective in more than 94 per cent of horses, reducing the clinical signs of strangles, including high temperature, coughing. Difficulty swallowing and inappetance. It can be administered to foals from the age of five months, with two injections given at a four-week interval.

The manufacturer states that horses at high risk of Streptococcus equi should be re-vaccinated after two months, such as those in livery. Immunological memory was found in horses following repeated vaccination six months after primary vaccination.

Strangvac has been made possible thanks to more than €20million of funding from the Animal Health Trust and, more recently, the Swedish company Intervacc AB. 

Dr Andrew Waller, chief scientific officer at Intervacc AB, the company that developed the vaccine, comments: “Strangvac is a groundbreaking new vaccine which, alongside good stable management and biosecurity procedures, can play a really important role in improving herd immunity and reducing the number of strangles cases in the equine population, thereby preventing major economic loss to the equestrian industry.”

Sara Barker, equine field support manager at Dechra, added: “Strangles is highly contagious and is one of the most common equine respiratory diseases with an estimated 600 outbreaks each year in the UK alone. Feared by horse owners due to the potential severity of clinical signs and the infectious nature of strangles, we are sure that the new strangles vaccine will be a vital tool in disease prevention and a huge benefit to the equestrian industry as a whole.”

Further information about the vaccine is available from Dechra territory sales managers.

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Cold-water dip to raise funds for Vetlife

News Story 1
 The veterinary mental health charity Vetlife is inviting the veterinary community to join it for a sponsored cold-water dip.

The event will take place at Walpole Bay, Margate, on 17 May during Mental Health Awareness Week. Participants of all abilities can join in the challenge and are advised to bring a towel, a hot drink, a snack, and warm clothes to get changed into afterwards.

Those taking part are being asked to try to raise 100 each to support the work of the charity.

Details about how to take part can be found here

Click here for more...
News Shorts
Defra to host bluetongue webinar for vets

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) will be hosting a webinar for veterinary professional on bluetongue on Thursday, 25 April 2024.

Topics covered will include the transmission cycle, pathology and pathogenesis, clinical signs (including signs seen in recent BTV-3 cases in the Netherlands), and control and prevention.

The session, which will take place from 6pm to 7.30pm, is part of Defra's 'Plan, Prevent and Protect' webinar series, which are hosted by policy officials, epidemiologists and veterinary professionals from Defra and the Animal and Plant Health Agency. The bluetongue session will also feature insights from experts from The Pirbright Institute.

Those attending will have the opportunity to ask questions. Places on the webinar can be booked online.