D | F | E logo Tox
STIZ
toxilit
index Me | previous | next
 

Medeiros RM, Barbosa RC, Lima EF, Simoes SV, Riet-Correa F.

 

  Authors

Intoxication of goats by Plumbago scandens in Northeastern Brazil.

 

  Title

Vet Hum Toxicol 2001 Jun;43(3):167-9

 

  Source
Plants, Veterinary toxicology

 

  Index terms
In the State of Paraiba, Northeastern Brazil, goat mortality occurred with the ingestion of Plumbago scandens. The fresh plant was then given experimentally to 4 goats at 5, 10, 17.5 or 25 g/kg bw. Depression, anorexia, salivation with foamy saliva, bellowing, bruxism, humpbacked posture, bloat, ruminal atony, continuous lateral head movements, tachycardia, dyspnea and dark brown to black urine were observed in the goats given 17.5 or 25 g/kg bw. The goats receiving 5 or 10 g/kg bw had less severe signs. The goat dosed with 25 g/kg bw died after 18-20 h. All others recovered in 3-9 d. At necropsy of the high dose goat, the main lesions were dark violet to black discoloration of the mucosa of the tongue, esophagus, reticulum and ventral sac of the rumen, and gelatinous edema in the visceral ruminal peritoneum. Histologically the reticulum and ventral rumen sac had diffuse epithelial necrosis and severe edema and neutrophilic infiltration of the submucosa. Separation of the ruminal epithelium from the submucosa was observed. Epithelial degeneration and necrosis was also seen in the omasum, esophagus and tongue. Reproduction of the disease with clinical signs similar to those observed by the farmer in the spontaneously affected goats suggests that the clinical mortality was caused by ingestion of Plumbago scandens.

 

  Abstract
Article

 

  Type
Disclaimer: The producers of these references take care to avoid errors but cannot be hold
responsible for inaccuracies. Also, knowledge is constantly changing and the reader is
advised to search carefully for the most recent and relevant studies.

 

page generated by mib