Year 2010 - Volume 30, Number 1


Title
Perinatal lesions caused in lambs by feeding Tetrapterys multiglandulosa (Malpighiaceae) to sheep at different stages of their pregnancy, 30(1):73-78
Authors

Abstract
ABSTRACT.- Cardinal S.G., Aniz A.C., Santos B.S., Carvalho N.M. & Lemos R.A.A. 2010. [Perinatal lesions caused in lambs by feeding Tetrapterys multiglandulosa (Malpighiaceae) to sheep at different stages of their pregnancy.] Lesões perinatais em ovinos causadas pela ingestão de Tetrapterys multiglandulosa (Malpighiaceae) em diferentes estágios de gestação. Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira 30(1):73-78. Departamento de Medicina Veterinária, Faculdade de Medicina Veterinária e Zootecnia, Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul, Av. Filinto Müller s/n, Cidade Universitária, Campo Grande, MS 79070-900, Brazil. E-mail: eqrural@nin.ufms.br

In order to verify the effects of non-lethal doses of Tetrapterys multiglandulosa on ovine fetuses, experimental poisoning in sheep at different days of pregnancy was performed. Green leaves of shooting plants were administered to 9 pregnant ewes divided into three experimental groups. Sheep from Group 1 received four doses of 5g/kg of fresh leaves for 4 days; those from Group 2 received 10g/kg for 2 days; Group 3 sheep received a dose of 20g/kg for one day, and sheep from Group 4 did not receive the plant and served as negative controls. To check the plant toxicity, a male sheep (positive control) received 5g/kg until the onset of clinical signs. No signs of poisoning were observed in pregnant ewes; three lambs died 1-5 days after birth, and a fourth lamb died within 3 months after have been born. The positive control died after 38 days of daily consumption of the plant, presenting tachypnea, tachycardia, drowsiness, incoordination, weakness and sudden death. All four dead lambs and the positive control sheep were necropsied. The gross lesions were whitish areas in the myocardium, increased lobular pattern of the liver, dark red lungs, metabolization of pericardial fat, and ruminal distention with free gas. Histological findings were cardiac fibrosis, cardiomyocyte necrosis, pulmonary congestion and edema, and spongy degeneration in subcortical cerebral white matter. Tetrapterys multiglandulosa resulted toxic for ovine fetuses at doses that were not suffient to induce clinical signs in the pregnant ewes, demonstrating that the poisoning may be a cause of death of lambs soon after birth, even several months after the ingestion of the plant has been discontinued.
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