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Experimental poisoning by Phalaris angusta (Gramineae) in cattle

To investigate the effects of the ingestion of different amounts of Phalaris angusta, eight 6-8-month-old calves were assigned to four treatment groups. Group I calves were fed only P. angusta. Group II calves were fed a mixture of 75 % of P. angusta and 25% of oat (Avena sativa) and ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum), whereas group III calves received a mixture of 50% of P.angusta and 50% of oat and ryegrass. Group IV calves received only oat and ryegrass and served as controls. P. angusta was toxic for calves. One group I calf died 34 days after the beginning of the ingestion of the plant, and the other calves were euthanatized in extremis 18 to 32 days after de beginning of the experiment. The main clinical signs were locomotor disorders, generalized tremors, frequent falls, and convulsions. Gross findings were confined to the brain and consisted of focal areas of green-bluish discoloration in the thalamus, mesencephalon, and medulla oblongata. Microscopic lesions were characterized by the presence of a intracytoplasmic yellow-brown indole-like pigment in neurons from grossly affected areas. Ultrastructural changes consisted of swollen lysosomes containing membranous material with variable orientation and density. The amount of ingested P. angusta was not a determinant factor for the severity of clinical signs and lesions. The extension of gross and microscopic lesions was not directly related with the intensity of the clinical signs. P. angusta was exclusively neurotoxic and should be considered as a differential diagnosis in cases of neurological disease of cattle with clinical signs consistent with tremorgenic syndrome.

Poisonous plants; CNS disease; Phalaris angusta; cattle


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