Robert W. Menges
University of Missouri
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Environmental Research | 1970
Robert W. Menges; Lloyd A. Selby; Carl J. Marienfeld; Walter A. Aue; Donald L. Greer
Abstract An epidemic of congenital limb deformities in swine is described. The epidemic occurred among 79 Duroc sows and gilts on a farm in Howard County, Missouri, during the period September 11, 1967, to March 3, 1968. The 79 females farrowed 782 pigs: 742 (95%) were born alive, 40 (5%) were born dead, and 59 (7.5%) were born with congenital abnormalities. The abnormal pigs were farrowed by 14 sows. These sows farrowed 149 pigs and 59 (40%) were abnormal. Tobacco stalks were placed in a swine lot and pasture between October 25, 1967, and December 7, 1967, and some of the sows were observed eating the stalks. On December 7, 1967, four sows had an illness which lasted 24–48 hours. The first 38 days of pregnancies in those sows with the affected progeny occurred during the time when the tobacco was available to them. Other animals not exposed to the tobacco stalks as a food source had no birth defects. The animals involved in the epidemic during prior and later reproductive periods had no abnormalities in their litters. The tobacco stalks, therefore, appeared to have some association with the epidemic. The tobacco stalks were tested for nitrate-nitrogen, pesticides, fungi, nicotine, and maleic hydrazide. The nitrate-nitrogen varied from 20 to 1390 ppm, and no significant amounts of aldrin, dieldrin, or pp′ -DDT were found. The fungi consistently isolated included a species of Penicillium identified as a variant of Penicillium cyclopium . Other species of fungi were isolated only sporadically, and no Aspergilli were found. Nicotine, other alkaloids or components of the tobacco stalks, appeared to be the most likely cause of the epidemic. The tobacco stalks eaten by the swine contained 1058 ppm of nicotine and 115 ppm of maleic hydrazide. The possible relationship of this epidemic of birth defects in swine associated with the ingestion of tobacco stalks to the increased fetal loss described among smoking mothers is discussed.
Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science | 1955
Robert W. Menges; Robert T. Habermann; Howard J. Stains
During the winter and spring of 1952-53, an epizootic occurred among raccoons (Procyon lotor Linneaus) in counties in eastern Kansas. The disease was called distemper or encephalitis by many of the hunters. in the area. The hunters noted that the sick raccoons were inactive, showed no fight, had swollen eyes, an eye and nasal discharge, diarrhea, and some showed signs indicating central nervous system damage. On October 30, 1952, a farmer living in the vicinity of Lone Star Lake in Douglas County, Kansas, reported that a neighbor had seen a few raccoons that were sick and non-aggressive. As the trapping season neared, a progressively larger number of reports were received concerning sick raccoons. When the season opened on December 1, raccoon-disease around Lone Star Lake and Baldwin was frequently mentioned by the local hunters.
American Journal of Epidemiology | 1970
Michael L. Furcolow; John F. Busey; Robert W. Menges; Ernest W. Chick
American Journal of Veterinary Research | 1957
Robert W. Menges; G. J. Love; William W. Smith; Lucille K. Georg
Journal of Investigative Dermatology | 1957
Robert W. Menges; Lucille K. Georg; Robert T. Habermann
American Journal of Veterinary Research | 1967
L. A. Selby; Robert W. Menges; R. T. Habermann
Javma-journal of The American Veterinary Medical Association | 1957
Lucille K. Georg; C. S. Roberts; Robert W. Menges; William Kaplan
American Journal of Epidemiology | 1954
Robert W. Menges; Robert T. Habermann
Proc. Meet. Amer. vet. med. Ass. | 1955
Robert W. Menges; Lucille K. Georg
American Journal of Epidemiology | 1953
Herbert A. Wenner; Gerald S. Harshfield; Te Wen Chang; Robert W. Menges