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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:Q9UIJ5 (
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58,342
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Six cases of accidental salinomycin poisoning in horses are described. The horses were fed a contaminated ration and presented clinical signs which were extremely varied in nature and severity. However, the range of signs, including anorexia, colic,
weakness
and ataxia bore similarities to those described in horses poisoned with the related ionophore monensin. Other similarities became apparent in serum biochemical profiles of the clinical cases. Although ionophore toxicity is rarely reported in horses they appear to be particularly susceptible, and it should therefore be considered as a differential diagnosis of digestive upsets or locomotory disorders at establishments where ionophore-treated feeds are used therapeutically in other species.
Vet
Rec
1987 Aug 08
PMID:Salinomycin poisoning in horses. 367 48
Toxic silo gases are a potential danger to livestock housed in close proximity to silos. On the fourth day of ensiling, five fattening pigs were found dead in a pen adjoining a grass silo. Post mortem examination revealed extensive lung damage and methaemoglobinaemia. A dense reddish-brown gas was concentrated at floor level to a height of 1 m in the pen and had diffused into adjoining pens, where dry and suckling sows and litters were showing signs of respiratory distress and
weakness
. The gas was identified as a mixture of nitrogen dioxide and dinitrogen tetroxide. These gases may be produced in the early stages of silage making. In this case, they had accumulated in a slurry channel below the silo and leaked through an adjoining wall into the piggery. The production and toxicological effects of silo gases are discussed.
Vet
Rec
1985 Feb 02
PMID:Nitrogen dioxide (silo gas) poisoning in pigs. 398 73
An outbreak of a haemorrhagic diathesis in cattle fed home produced hay is described. A similar syndrome was reproduced experimentally in calves by feeding them the hay. The experimental disease was characterised by increased prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times while the leucocyte and erythrocyte counts remained normal until the terminal haemorrhage. The calves ate well and grew well until the rapid onset of progressive
weakness
, stiff gait, mucosal pallor, tachycardia, tachypnoea and haematomata ending in sudden death. The absence of blood coagulation was seen at necropsy while petechial, ecchymotic and free haemorrhages were found in most organs. Particularly striking were massive ecchymotic haemorrhages on the peritoneal surface of the rumen, a bloody, gelatinous mass enveloping each kidney and extensive bruising, haemorrhage and haematomata in the subcutis of the limbs. In a second feeding trial the effects of various preparations of vitamin K1 and vitamin K3 were investigated. Oral administration of large quantities of vitamin K1 reduced the elevated prothrombin time; vitamin K3 acted less consistently. Analysis of the hay for trichothecene mycotoxins was negative but floral analysis revealed that sweet vernal grass (Anthoxanthum odoratum) comprised about 80 per cent of the hay. Dicoumarol was detected in the hay and in the serum and ruminal contents of the experimental calves. The diagnosis, treatment, control and importance of this syndrome in the United Kingdom are discussed.
Vet
Rec
1983 Jul 23
PMID:Haemorrhagic syndrome of cattle associated with the feeding of sweet vernal (Anthoxanthum odoratum) hay containing dicoumarol. 619 8
Nineteen cases of primary autoimmune haemolytic anaemia are reported in the dog. The clinical features included pale mucous membranes,
weakness
, lethargy and collapse. The intravascular haemolytic type of the disease was seen in nine cases and was characterised by evidence of haemolysis (eg, marked bilirubinaemia). The other 10 cases were classed as the extravascular destructive type of autoimmune haemolytic anaemia. The presence of autoantibodies (of the IgG class) and complement (C3) on the red blood cells from affected patients was demonstrated by a commercial Coombs' (antiglobulin) test which, although it has disadvantages, is satisfactory providing it is interpreted in association with the clinical, haematological and biochemical features. Treatment of these 19 dogs was with prednisolone and was successful in most cases.
Vet
Rec
1981 Aug 22
PMID:Primary autoimmune haemolytic anaemia in the dog. 732 59
A familial progressive muscular
weakness
is described in a herd of pietrain pigs. The onset of disease was at two to three weeks of age taking the form of a muscular tremor when the piglets were standing. An impaired gait followed and by 12 weeks of age the pigs had become permanently recumbent. The observed incidence of the syndrome and the breeding data available were consistent with an autosomal recessive inheritance of the condition.
Vet
Rec
1980 Jun 28
PMID:A progressive, familial myopathy of the pietrain pig: the clinical syndrome. 743 27
Bacterial meningoencephalitis most commonly affected lambs two to four weeks old (median three weeks, range three days to six months) with clinical signs of episcleral congestion, lack of suck reflex,
weakness
, altered gait and depression extending to stupor, but hyperaesthesia to auditory and tactile stimuli. Opisthotonos was observed during the agonal stages of the disease. Analysis of lumbosacral cerebrospinal fluid revealed a highly significant increase in protein concentration (P < 0.01) with a neutrophilic pleocytosis, but bacteriological culture yielded organisms in only a few cases. A response was achieved with high doses of dexamethasone and chloramphenicol in only one of 20 cases. Polyarthritis and liver abscesses in a number of lambs provided evidence of a previous bacteraemic or septicaemic episode but no definite source of the central nervous system infection was identified. In common with other infectious bacterial conditions which are prevalent during the early life of sheep, control measures should ensure an adequate transfer of passive antibody, repeated treatments of the navel, and hygienic conditions in the lambing and rearing environments.
Vet
Rec
1994 Aug 13
PMID:A field study of ovine bacterial meningoencephalitis. 798 44
Three horses with an apparent neurological disorder resulting from nettle rash showed signs of ataxia, distress and muscle
weakness
, and two of them had urticaria. In each case the condition resolved within four hours, with no long term problems or recurrence.
Vet
Rec
1994 Jan 01
PMID:An unusual manifestation of nettle rash in three horses. 812 60
The author's cat started to develop the signs of pemphigus foliaceus one month after he returned home after six months absence. The initial signs included dry coughing and difficulty with purring and swallowing, followed by typical changes of the skin. The cat was treated by a combination of chrysotherapy and systemic glucocorticoid injections, and remained free of clinical signs for one and a half years. The cat then relapsed and showed the initial signs except that coughing was not observed. It was treated as before but after a second relapse and the same treatment it slowly developed a general
weakness
and was euthanased.
Vet
Rec
1993 Jan 16
PMID:Pemphigus foliaceus in a cat. 843 Apr 84
Lasalocid sodium was accidentally introduced into the feed of several broiler breeder chicken farms at levels between 115 and 150 ppm. On one farm, leg
weakness
and ataxia were observed in a few cockerels. A reduction in egg production and a sharp decrease in fertility and hatchability were observed in all the flocks receiving the contaminated feed. Many piping chicks were unable to hatch and there was an increase in the number of weak ataxic chicks at the hatchery. Histological examination of the muscle tissues of the affected cockerels, the piping chicks unable to hatch and the one-day-old chicks with leg
weakness
and ataxia revealed severe muscle damage. Increasing levels of lasalocid were detected in the yolk of eggs collected from the affected flocks.
Vet
Rec
1993 Mar 13
PMID:Effects of the accidental feeding of lasalocid sodium to broiler breeder chickens. 846 4
The history, clinical signs and radiographic and ultrasonographic findings in 16 dogs with pancreatic neoplasia were reviewed retrospectively. Thirteen of the dogs had islet cell carcinoma compatible with insulinoma, one had a pancreatic adenocarcinoma and two had secondary invasion of the pancreas, one by a gastric carcinoma and one by an intestinal lymphoma. The clinical signs in the 13 dogs with insulinoma included collapse in 10 dogs, ataxia in seven,
weakness
in five, and seizures in two. Two of the 16 dogs had jaundice due to biliary obstruction by the primary tumour or metastases. The sensitivities for pancreatic neoplasia were three of 16 (19 per cent) for radiography and 12 of 16 (75 per cent) for ultrasonography; the sensitivities for metastasis were two of 11 (18 per cent) for radiography and six of 11 (55 per cent) for ultrasonography. Biliary obstruction was detected by ultrasonography in both affected dogs.
Vet
Rec
1995 Jul 15
PMID:Ultrasonography of pancreatic neoplasia in the dog: a retrospective review of 16 cases. 853 34
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