Literature DB >> 14640476

Assessment of some clinical and laboratory variables for early diagnosis of cumulative copper poisoning in sheep.

Enrico Lippi Ortolani1, Carlos Henrique Machado, Maria Claudia Araripe Sucupira.   

Abstract

Sixteen male Suffolk lambs fed a 8 ppm Cu basal diet were randomly assigned to 2 groups: 12 copper-loaded (CL) and 4 controls (C). The CL sheep were drenched initially with 3 mg Cu/kg bw daily for a week. Every week an additional dose of 3 mg Cu/kg bw was included in the drench until signs of copper poisoning appeared; the control sheep were drenched with saline solution. The onset of copper poisoning occurred between 42 and 55 d. Food intake and body weight were recorded daily. Blood samples were collected weekly to measure the activity of the liver enzymes gamma-glutamyltransferase (gammaGT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), sorbitoll dehydrogenase (SDH) and acid phosphatase (AF). The following changes were significantly recorded in the CL sheep in the weeks or days previous to the hemolytic crisis: higher levels of gammaGT were found on the -28th d increasing slowly but continuously until the hemolytic crisis; SDH fluctuated during the period presenting higher levels on the -28th, -14th and -7th d; AST and AF activities increased from the -14th and -7th d respectively; sharp decreases in the activities of SDH and AF at the hemolytic crisis; lower feed intake and body weight gain from the -7th d; and sheep ceased eating concentrates from the -9th d and became anoretic the day before the hemolytic crisis. Plasma copper concentration increased only the day before the hemolytic crisis. There were no changes in respiratory and heart rates, rectal temperature or rumen movements throughout the pre-hemolytic phase. The higher the amount of cumulative copper drenched, the higher was the gammaGT and AST activities. It was concluded that gammaGT followed by AST are the best enzymes to assess copper-load in sheep during the pre-hemolytic phase. Sheep fed copper-rich diets with high plasma activity of these enzymes, decreased feed consumption and subtle loss of body weight are most likely to present with a hemolytic crisis in a few days.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14640476

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vet Hum Toxicol        ISSN: 0145-6296


  2 in total

1.  Dietary Zinc Supplementation to Prevent Chronic Copper Poisoning in Sheep.

Authors:  Antonio Humberto Hamad Minervino; Marta López-Alonso; Raimundo Alves Barrêto Júnior; Frederico Augusto Mazzocca Lopes Rodrigues; Carolina Akiko Sato Cabral Araújo; Rejane Santos Sousa; Clara Satsuk Mori; Marta Miranda; Francisco Leonardo Costa Oliveira; Alexandre Coutinho Antonelli; Enrico Lippi Ortolani
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2018-11-30       Impact factor: 2.752

2.  Copper deficiency in sheep with high liver iron accumulation.

Authors:  Isadora Karolina Freitas de Sousa; Antonio Humberto Hamad Minervino; Rejane Dos Santos Sousa; Dowglish Ferreira Chaves; Herbert Sousa Soares; Isabella de Oliveira Barros; Carolina Akiko Sato Cabral de Araújo; Raimundo Alves Barrêto Júnior; Enrico Lippi Ortolani
Journal:  Vet Med Int       Date:  2012-12-18
  2 in total

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