Literature DB >> 3987297

Narthecium asiaticum Maxim. Poisoning of grazing cattle: observations on spontaneous and experimental cases.

K Suzuki, M Kobayashi, A Ito, M Nakgawa.   

Abstract

A total of 39 Holstein cattle were grazed in tracts of wild grassland on account of shortage in pasture grass. Twenty-nine cattle were affected and 26 of them died during a 21-day period. The main signs were depression, anorexia, ascites, and oliguria. There was elevated serum urea nitrogen and sugar and protein in the urine. Pathological examination revealed turbid swelling of the kidney, an increase in the amount of fluid in the body cavity, edema in the perirenal adipose tissue and hemorrhage in various visceral organs and tissues. Histologically, acute tubular necrosis in the kidney, hypoplasia of the erythroblast series in the bone marrow, atrophy and degeneration of the lymphatic tissue and focal necrosis of the liver were observed in many of the cattle. Among cows experimentally fed Narthecium asiaticum Maxim., Polygonum sachalinense Fr. Schum., and Vitis coignetiae Pulliat which were presumed to have been ingested in large amounts by grazing cattle in the field, the cows fed N. asiaticum revealed the clinical, biochemical and pathological changes similar to those noticed in naturally affected cattle. Cows fed P. sachalinense and V. coignetiae showed no distinct systemic symptoms except transient anorexia and hypothermia.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 3987297

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cornell Vet        ISSN: 0010-8901


  1 in total

1.  Nephrotoxicity and hepatotoxicity in calves apparently caused by experimental feeding with Narthecium ossifragum.

Authors:  A Flåøyen; B Bratberg; A Frøslie; H Grønstøl
Journal:  Vet Res Commun       Date:  1995       Impact factor: 2.459

  1 in total

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