Selenium toxicosis with focal symmetrical poliomyelomalacia in postweaning pigs in South Africa
1996
An outbreak of paralysis in finisher pigs in South Africa after ingestion of feed containing 54,581 mg/kg of selenium is described. The main and entirely consistent lesion was bilaterally symmetrical focal poliomalacia of the ventral horns of the spinal cord, which was most severe and consistent in the lumbar intumescence. Acute and subacute lesions were characterized by malacia with large numbers of gitter cells. The main features of chronic lesions were loss of neurons and gliosis. Focal degeneration and necrosis of the myocardium and skeletal muscles were also consistent, but there were fewer specific changes. Endothelial swelling, mild fibrinoid degeneration and perivascular leukocytic infiltration were present in the acute stage. Dermatitis, coronitis and hoof sloughing, usually present in more chronic cases of intoxication, were not a feature of the present outbreak, although alopecia and crusting were evident on the backs of a few pigs several weeks after the episode of intoxication. Serum- and tissue-selenium levels were elevated in the early stages after intoxication. Serum levels were nearly normal in chronic cases two months after the episode, while liver and kidney levels were still higher than normal. Higher levels were found in liver, kidney and serum than in muscle, with the highest levels in the kidney. Less than 20% of affected pigs recovered sufficiently to be marketed.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]الكلمات المفتاحية الخاصة بالمكنز الزراعي (أجروفوك)
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