1. Poisoning by Ipomoea asarifolia in lambs by the ingestion of milk from ewes that ingest the plant.
- Author
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Carvalho de Lucena KF, Rodrigues JM, Campos ÉM, Dantas AF, Pfister JA, Cook D, Medeiros RM, and Riet-Correa F
- Subjects
- Animals, Brazil, Female, Ipomoea toxicity, Pregnancy, Sheep, Tremor chemically induced, Ipomoea chemistry, Maternal-Fetal Exchange physiology, Milk chemistry, Plant Poisoning veterinary, Sheep Diseases chemically induced, Tremor veterinary
- Abstract
Two experiments, each with 10 pregnant ewes (8 treated and 2 controls) were performed to determine if nursing lambs of lactating ewes become intoxicated when the ewes ingest Ipomoea asarifolia but do not show clinical signs themselves. In the first experiment the sheep grazed I. asarifolia in the field while in the second, sheep were maintained in individual bays consuming dry I. asarifolia at 10% and 20% into their ration. In both experiments the lambs remained confined, consuming only their mother's milk. Four of 8 lambs in the grazing experiment and the 4 nursing lambs from the ewes given 20% I. asarifolia showed signs of I. asarifolia poisoning. These results confirm that the tremorgenic compound of I. asarifolia or its toxic metabolites are eliminated in milk and can intoxicate nursing lambs., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
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