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58,342 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical responses of sheep dosed orally over seven to 14 weeks with the dried mycelium of a soil-borne mould containing the tremorgenic mycotoxin penitrem A are described. An initial tremoring response was gradually overshadowed by an incoordination syndrome similar to that seen in ryegrass staggers. In spite of protracted staggers symptomatology, correlated with in vitro changes in the release of neurotransmitter amino acids from corpus striatum nerve ending preparations, no histopathology was evident in the wide range of neural and other tissue studied. The biochemical nature of this reversible mycotoxicosis is discussed.
Vet Rec 1979 Oct 27
PMID:Clinical studies on tremorgenic mycotoxicoses in sheep. 55 34

In September 1984 some sheep in a flock of 250 suffered depression, anorexia, incoordination and difficulty in rising; 50 ewes and weaners died. Post mortem examination revealed petechial bleeding, massive acute liver necrosis and in some animals degeneration of the kidney tubules. The rumen and gut contained many larvae of the blue-black birch sawfly (Arge pullata). Laboratory and field observations indicated that these were the cause of the illness.
Vet Rec 1987 Sep 12
PMID:Sawfly poisoning in sheep and goats. 289 Dec 13

A series of 1-alkylsulfonylaryl-1,4-benzodiazepine derivatives were synthesized and assayed for their pharmacological profile. All the compounds tested exhibited a competitive antagonism of 3H-diazepam binding in cerebellum, cerebrum and submaxillary gland. Compound II (rec. INN tolufazepam) had a Ki of 12.7 nM in cerebrum and 400 nM in the submaxillary gland. It was very potent in preventing convulsions elicited by pentylenetetrazol (ED50 p.o.: 16.5 and ED50 i.v.: 20 mg/kg). This anticonvulsant action was suppressed by previous administration of Ro 15-1788. Compound II was also active in inhibiting suppressive behaviour in the test of Vogel. This compound has a relative low hypnogenic activity as well as a low potency to produce motor incoordination. Our results show that tolufazepam has a potential clinical usefulness.
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PMID:Pharmacological activity of novel alkylsulfonylaryl-1-substituted-1,4-benzodiazepine derivatives. 290 26

The clinical and anatomical features of a live-born diprosopic lamb are described. There are no complete anatomical analyses of two-faced lambs in the literature despite the frequency of conjoined twinning in sheep. The lamb had two heads fused in the occipital region. Each head had two eyes. The pinnae of the medial ears were fused. Caudal to the neck the lamb appeared grossly normal. The lamb was unable to raise its heads or stand. Both heads showed synchronous sucking motions and cranial reflexes were present. Nystagmus, strabismus, and limb incoordination were present. The respiratory and heart rates were elevated. There was a grade IV murmur over the left heart base and a palpable thrill on the left side. Each head possessed a normal nasopharynx, oropharynx, and tongue. There was a singular laryngopharnyx and esophagus although the hyoid apparatus was partially duplicated. The cranial and cervical musculature reflected the head duplications. The aortic trunk emerged from the right ventricle just to the right of the conus arteriosus. A ventricular septal defect, patent foramen ovale, and ductus arteriosus were present along with malformed atrioventricular valves. Brainstem fusion began at the cranial medulla oblongata between cranial nerves IX and XII. The cerebella were separate but small. The ventromedial structures from each medulla oblongata were compressed into an extraneous midline remnant of tissue which extended caudally to the level of T2. The clinical signs therefore reflected the anatomical anomalies. A possible etiology for this diprosopus might be the presence early in development of an excessively large block of chordamesoderm. This would allow for the formation of two head folds and hence two "heads."
Anat Rec 1986 Apr
PMID:Clinical and anatomical observations of a two-headed lamb. 370 86

The response of six calves to subcutaneous inoculation with louping-ill virus was studied. All developed viraemia of low intensity which lasted two to four days followed by the appearance of haemagglutination inhibiting serum antibody. IgM was the predominant class of antibody until day 14. Only one calf developed clinical signs; following a brief period of incoordination on day 7 it became recumbent and was killed on day 12. Severe meningoencephalitis was detected in this calf and mild changes were observed in one of the five survivors which were killed on day 14 or 20. These findings are discussed in relation to the epidemiology of louping-ill and the diagnosis of the disease in cattle.
Vet Rec 1981 Jun 06
PMID:Experimental louping-ill virus infection of cattle. 719 42

The signs and treatment of abnormal reactions following the use of organophosphorus systemic warble fly dressings are recorded. A review is provided of all complaints received by the manufacturers and distributors of such compounds during the dressing periods for the years 1975 to 1978. The volume of warble fly dressing sold each year was known and the number of cattle dressed was based on the calculation of the number of adults which could have been treated with the volume. Complaints were divided according to the main signs reported and the most common complaint was that of paralysis-incoordination. The incidence of death or slaughter following use of an organophosphorus compound was one in 93,000 animals treated. The majority of animals showing abnormal signs other than paralysis-incoordination were involved in incidences of skin lesions, depressed milk yield, bloat or 'other reactions'. Compared with the number of animals treated, the level of reported reaction was low (one complaint per 46,000 animals treated).
Vet Rec 1981 Aug 29
PMID:Abnormal reactions and their frequency in cattle following the use of organophosphorus warble fly dressings. 732 66

A field case involving seven recently inseminated Yorkshire sows injected with penicillin is described. About four hours after injection, the pigs showed shivering, incoordination, vomiting, extreme lassitude, pyrexia (41 degrees C) and to;al inappetence. In each case, a thick, white mucous discharge appeared from the vulva one to three days after injection, with distinct embryos in some cases. Further experiments on pregnant and fattening pigs indicated that untoward reactions to penicillin could arise in swine--in particular, embryonic death.
Vet Rec 1980 Feb 02
PMID:Penicillin G procaine: a possible cause of embryonic death in swine. 736 8

Following an outbreak of wobbly possum disease in a colony of brush tail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula), the disease was established experimentally in captive possums by inoculating the animals intraperitoneally with tissue homogenates. Crude tissue homogenates of liver remained infectious after freezing at -75 degrees C or filtration through a 0.22 micron filter. The disease was characterised by docility, incoordination, loss of balance and wasting. Fifteen of 16 infected animals had to be euthanased owing to the severity of clinical signs. Cachexia was the only change observed postmortem. Histology revealed widespread perivascular infiltrations with plasma cells and lymphocytes which were severe in the liver and kidney and moderate to mild in a variety of other tissues, including skeletal and cardiac muscle. Changes in the brain consisted of a mild to moderate mononuclear perivascular cuffing. Most of the animals had small to large numbers of circulating nucleated red blood cells and eosinopenia when they were euthanased. There was a consistent decrease in serum albumin concentration and an increase in serum globulins, which resulted in a decreased albumin:globulin ratio. Virus-like particles were observed in preparations of liver from two animals; they appeared to be spherical or icosahedral and were 45 nm in diameter.
Vet Rec 1997 Aug 30
PMID:Pathological studies of wobbly possum disease in New Zealand brushtail possums (Trichosurus vulpecula). 930 Oct 11

Fifteen cats from Italy with Ehrlichia-like inclusion bodies in their neutrophils were studied. They were diagnosed with Anaplasma (Ehrlichia) phagocytophilum infection on the basis of cytological observation of morulae within 1 to 21 per cent of their neutrophils, clinical signs characteristic of ehrlichiosis and their response to doxycycline. The predominant signs of disease were anorexia, lethargy, hyperaesthesia, muscle and joint pain, lameness, neck rigidity, lymphadenomegaly, gingivitis/periodontitis, conjunctivitis, weight loss, incoordination, pale mucous membranes and hyperglobulinaemia. The cat with inclusions in 21 per cent of its neutrophils had suffered arthralgia, tachypnoea, neck rigidity, vomiting and thrombocytopenia for four months, but recovered promptly after treatment with doxycycline.
Vet Rec 2005 Jun 11
PMID:Microscopic and clinical evidence for Anaplasma (Ehrlichia) phagocytophilum infection in Italian cats. 1595