| Literature DB >> 35405843 |
Abstract
Reports of unintentional intoxications in nonhuman primates (NHP) are few and an up-to-date review of such intoxications in NHP is lacking. We reviewed the published veterinary literature on unintentional intoxications in wild and captive NHP in order to provide a useful resource on known toxic agents of NHP for veterinarians, caregivers, and researchers who work with NHP. To these ends, we first conducted a literature search for books, book chapters, peer-reviewed publications, conference proceedings, and newsletters in academic literature databases such as Google Scholar, PubMed, BioOne Complete, and Web of Science using the words and word combinations such as heavy metals, pesticides, poisonings, and nonhuman primates. We then evaluated the search results for those reports that we considered as clinically relevant and then classified them according to the toxic agent. We identified lead, zinc, phytotoxins, pesticides, botulinum toxin, polychlorinated biphenyls, and snake and spider venoms as the main toxic agents in wild and captive NHP. We concluded that the toxic threats to wild NHP are different to those of captive NHP because of the environment in which they live. We recommend that an intoxication should be part of a differential diagnosis when a NHP presents with clinical signs that cannot be linked to a known disorder or dies suddenly with no preceding clinical signs. In cases of the former, laboratory testing for known toxins and pollutants should be conducted. In cases of the latter, a thorough postmortem examination, together with extensive laboratory testing, for known toxins and environmental pollutants in all tissues and organs should be performed.Entities:
Keywords: chemical hazards; intoxication; nonhuman primates; poisoning
Year: 2022 PMID: 35405843 PMCID: PMC8996898 DOI: 10.3390/ani12070854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
The main toxic agents in nonhuman primates.
| Section | Toxic Agent |
|---|---|
| 2 | Lead |
| 3 | Zinc |
| 4 | Phytotoxins |
| 5 | Pesticides |
| 6 | Botulinum toxin |
| 7 | Polychlorinated biphenyls |
| 8 | Snake and spider venoms |
| 9 | Miscellaneous |
Cases of unintentional phytotoxin poisoning in captive NHP.
| NHP Species | Plant Species | Phytotoxin | Clinical Signs | Clinical Signs | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| English ivy ( | Severe gastroenteritis resulting in acute death | Not performed | Fowler, 1981 [ | |
| White mantled-black colobus ( | Alleghany ( | Pain, lethargy, inappetence, unable to climb, vomiting, diarrhea resulting in death | Small spicules of plant material were present in the inflammatory exudate associated with the stomach’s mucosa | Irlbeck et al., 2001 [ | |
| François’ langurs ( | Hybrid yew shrub ( | Taxine | Found dead without previous clinical signs | Multiple yew fragments in gastric content and taxine alkaloids were detected by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry of the gastric contents | Lacasse et al., 2007 [ |
| Alaotran gentle lemur ( | Russian vine ( | Oxalate | Varying degrees of lethargy, inappetence, abdominal discomfort and diarrhea progressing to signs of renal insufficiency (hematuria, proteinuria, and severe uremia) resulting in death | Chronic renal failure, presence of calcium oxalate crystals in the renal tubules | Scott, 1996 [ |
| black and white ruffed lemurs ( | Hairy nightshade ( | Alkaloid | Acute death or less active and partial inappetence for 48 h followed by depression, lethargy, ataxia, diarrhea, and slow pupillary reflexes prior to death | acute, severe, diffuse hemorrhagic enteritis and typhlitis and a small volume of unidentifiable plant material was found in the stomach contents | Drew & Fowler, 1991 [ |
(A) Summary of the reported cases of death in wild NHP due to acute pesticide poisoning on agricultural frontiers. (B) Summary of the reported birth defects and congenital anomalies in wild NHP due to suspected continual pesticide exposure on agricultural frontiers. * The clinical signs and main laboratory findings and pathology were often not performed and documented in the report.
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| Not specified | Anticoagulant | Not provided | Not performed | Bates, 2016 [ |
| Vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus pygerythrus) | Aldicarb, carbofuran | Sudden death | Not performed | Botha et al., 2015 [ |
| Golden Langurs ( | Organochlorine | Sudden death | Insecticide was detected in the liver, kidney, and intestinal contents | Pathak, 2011 [ |
| Bonnet macaque ( | Carbofuran (a | Sudden death | Cyanosis, severe pulmonary congestion, splenomegaly and dark purplish-blue granules, identified as carbofuran, in the gastric contents | Radhakrishnan, 2017, 2018 [ |
| Cynomolgus monkeys ( | Anticoagulant bromadiolone and | Sudden death | extensive subcutaneous and internal hemorrhages. Bromadiolone and difenacoum were detected in frozen liver samples | IJzer et al., 2009 [ |
| Squirrel Monkey ( | Fipronil | Ranging from sudden death to symptoms of depression, inappetence, lethargy and body weight loss, which progressively disappear over time | Fipronil and fipronil sulfone were detected in cutaneous and brain tissue | Demir et al., 2021 [ |
| Tantalus monkeys ( | Dieldrin | Sudden death | Not performed | Koeman et al., 1978 [ |
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| Ring-tailed lemurs | Organochlorine | * | * | Rainwater et al., 2009 [ |
| Chimpanzees and baboons | Several different pesticides | (Congenital) facial and nasal deformities (i.e., reduced nostrils, cleft lip), limb deformities, reproductive problems, and hypopigmentation | * | Krief et al., 2017 [ |
| Baboons, howler monkeys, chimpanzees, red-tailed monkeys, red colobus | Pesticides, | * | * | Wang et al., 2020 [ |
| Douc langurs ( | Dioxins (i.e., Agent Orange, tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin) and dioxin-related compounds | Two animals exhibited developmental consequences of possible dioxin exposure | * | Brockman et al., 2009 [ |
| Baboons ( | Pesticides | * | * | Ogada, 2014 [ |
| Japanese monkeys ( | Dieldrin and heptacholorepoxide | Congenital defects such as abnormal limbs in offspring | Elevated concentration of dieldrin and heptacholorepoxide in the liver and kidney of female monkeys whose babies were born with malformations | Minezawa et al., 1990 [ |