US CEM Update
As reported by TheHorse.com, a Wisconsin stallion is the latest horse diagnosed with contagious equine metritis (CEM) as part of the ongoing outbreak in the US that dates back to at least 2008. Fortunately, authorities have known about this stallion for quite some time and he's been under quarantine, but testing was only performed recently because previously the owner had refused to allow it. (Just another example of how the "head in the sand" approach to infectious diseases gets you nowhere. Ignoring it won't make it go away. At best, as in this case, it will just delay the inevitable. At worst, it will result in widespread disease transmission... ok, off the soapbox now...)
USDA officials report that the outbreak is winding down, as the status of exposed horses is being determined. Kentucky, Georgia, Iowa and Indiana are considered CEM-free because all known exposed horses have been tested and treated. That's great, as long as they really know who all of the exposed horses are. Hopefully, that is the case. Encouragingly, USDA officials say they are going to be testing horses not known to have been exposed to horses from this outbreak. That's an important step to demonstrate that they really do have the situation under control. For this to be convincing, however, a large number of horses need to be tested, something that isn't cheap or easy, but which is critical to truly know what is happening and to convince other countries that the US is truly on its way to becoming CEM free.
Unfortunately it's still unclear whether all positive or exposed horses have really been tracked down. It's also far from certain that the disease has been contained to the US, because of the amount of horse movement between the US and countries like Canada. Considering how far back these cases go, the reluctance of some horse owners to cooperate with the investigation and the variable degree of concern by different regulatory agencies, among other factors, I'm not sure we've heard the last of this disease in North America.
More information about CEM is available in our archives.

The UK's 

The investigation of the
Until the outbreak investigation in the USA is complete and the disease is contained, use extreme caution or simply refrain from importing breeding animals, semen, embryos etc. from the USA.
In December 2008, an outbreak of contagious equine metritis (CEM) was reported in Kentucky. The index case was a healthy stallion that underwent routine testing for exportation of semen and the causative agent, Taylorella equigenitalis, was isolated by cutlure on December 15. By the end of the month, three more stallions on the same farm were also identified as infected. At the moment, it is estimated that there are 28 horses in Kentucky and another 156 horses outside Kentucky that have been exposed. Another 250 horses are being traced across 27 states. The last outbreak of CEM in the USA was in 1979 in Missouri, although a few sporadic cases have been identified in the country in the last three decades. It is a reportable disease in both the USA and Canada, and there are strict import (and export) regulations for horses entering the USA and Canada from CEM-positive countries.
