Valley Fever in Alpacas & Llamas in Tucson AZ
Valley Fever in Alpacas & Llamas
Learn about Valley Fever in llamas and alpacas, its symptoms, diagnosis, and challenges in treatment, with guidance on prevention and care from experienced veterinarians in endemic regions.
What Is Valley Fever?
The term “Valley Fever” refers to both the fungal infection and the range of symptoms that it causes.
What States Have Valley Fever?
AZ, CA, TX
Small number of cases – UT, NV, NM,
Human cases have been documented in WA and CO as well.
How Do Llamas and Alpacas Get Valley Fever?
Once the lungs have been exposed to the infectious fungal spores, the lifecycle of the Coccidioides fungus continues. The spores take root in the lungs where they grow, mature, and reproduce. If left untreated, they can spread, causing painful symptoms and health problems throughout the body.
Most humans, and probably even most alpacas and llamas, successfully contain the fungus in the lungs at the beginning of infection and don’t get sick.
Is Valley Fever Contagious?
What Signs and Symptoms Should Camelid Owners Watch for in Their Animals?
When animals demonstrate illness, the most common signs are weight loss, coughing, decreased energy, and decreased appetite.
Others include lameness, joint swelling, inability to stand or walk, fever, cardiac disease, non-healing skin lesions, brain or spinal cord symptoms, and reproductive issues. Abortions were reported for 2 alpacas and 5 crias (4 alpaca, 1 llama) born with Valley Fever from their mothers died. The dams were also usually euthanized or died.
Butkiewicz, Shubitz, Transbound Emerg Dis, 2019, Vol 66:807-812
Grayzel, et.al., Medical Mycology, 2021, Vol 59(6):571-577.
Fernandez, et.al., J Vet Diagn Investigation, 2018; DOI:10.1177/1040638718777282.
How is Valley Fever Diagnosed?
How is Valley Fever Treated? Is the treatment successful?
The medications are altered in the forestomachs making them less able to get into the bloodstream where they need to be to work. In the past, I have worked with Dr. Shubitz on some small trials where we tried to get the blood levels of the medication high enough to try to treat the Valley Fever, but we have not been able to find a consistent medication, dose, or way to give it that gets us what we need. In one of the trials, we used rectal suppositories with the medication to try to bypass the forestomachs. In another trial, we administered oral medications at high doses twice daily. Neither gave us the results we were hoping for. One of the big problems is that there is not a lot of money available to fund studies in camelids as the problem is regional and there is a relatively small population of camelids in this small area.
A small study of fluconazole in alpacas performed by veterinarians at the Valley Fever Center for Excellence (UArizona, Tucson) showed that doses of 10-15 mg/kg/day produced blood concentrations high enough to potentially treat Valley Fever in about half of the animals. This was a pharmacokinetics study designed to understand doses of this drug that have the potential to make alpacas well, but there are currently no studies of the actual efficacy of this medication in alpacas or llamas. For more details on the study and its results, follow this link to the Valley Fever Center for Excellence.
Butkiewicz, CD, Shubitz LF, Nix DE. A preliminary study of the plasma concentrations of orally administered fluconazone in alpacas (Vicugna pacos) J Vet Pharmacol and Ther 2021:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/jvp.12994
Why Are Camelids So Susceptible to Valley Fever?
What Can Camelid Owners Do to Prevent Valley Fever?