Stephanie C. Lima
Federal University of Mato Grosso do Sul
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Toxicon | 2017
Rayane Chitolina Pupin; Paula V. Leal; Stephanie C. Lima; Gleice Kelli Ayardes de Melo; Arnildo Pott; Marcelo Augusto de Araújo; Claudio S.L. Barros; Ricardo A.A. Lemos
ABSTRACT The ingestion of pods of Enterolobium contortisiliquum is associated with digestive disturbances, photosensitivity and abortion in domestic ruminants. This experiment was designed to test the hypothesis that digestive disturbances in this toxicosis are really caused by acute ruminal acidosis. Three sheep fed large doses (10–15 g/kg/body weight [bw]) of E. contortisiliquum pods developed ruminal acidosis and were treated with sodium bicarbonate to try to control this metabolic disturbance, thus providing additional evidence of the involvement of ruminal acidosis in the pathogenesis of toxicosis. Two of the sheep died, and one recovered after treatment. In the two sheep that developed severe signs of ruminal acidosis, the values of blood lactate were 18 mg/dL and 196.88 mg/dL, indicating metabolic acidosis as the cause of death. Additionally, four sheep developed elevated serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase and gamma glutamyl transferase, indicating that the pods had hepatotoxic effects. Necropsy findings included the accentuation of the hepatic lobular pattern and multiple focally extensive red areas in the rumen mucosa and on the surface of the liver. Repeated ingestion of small doses induced tolerance but did not induce cumulative effects. Histopathologically, the epithelial mucosa of the rumen and reticulum exhibited swollen and vacuolated epithelia with intraepithelial pustules. Focal ulceration of the mucosa was also observed. Multifocal vacuolar degeneration of hepatocytes and scattered individual hepatocellular necrosis were evident in the liver. We concluded that the main clinical manifestation of intoxication by E. contortisiliquum pods in sheep was acute ruminal lactic acidosis and metabolic acidosis. Ingestion of repeated sublethal doses could stimulate proliferation of the ruminal fauna that degrades the sugar present in the pods, and thereby prevent the occurrence of ruminal acidosis. The plant is also hepatotoxic, and no abortions were observed. HIGHLIGHTSThe digestive disturbances in sheep fed the pods of Enterolobium contortisiliquum result from acute ruminal acidosis.Repeated ingestion of sublethal doses of the pods induces tolerance.Enterolobium contortisiliquum pods have no accumulative toxic effect.The pods of Enterolobium contortisiliquum are hepatotoxic.
Toxicon | 2017
Paula V. Leal; Rayane Chitolina Pupin; Stephanie C. Lima; Gleice Kelli Ayardes de Melo; Marcelo Augusto de Araújo; Danilo Carloto Gomes; Claudio S.L. Barros; Ricardo A.A. Lemos
ABSTRACT Enterolobium contortisiliquum (Leg. Mimosoidae) is reported as a poisonous plant related to photosensitization and photodermatitis, digestive disturbs and abortion. To date, the clinical and pathological features of photosensitization has not been reproduced or only reproduced associated with very mild presentations. The objective of this study was to reproduce in cattle the clinicopathological features of photosensitization associated with the ingestion of the pods of E. contortisiliquum. The pods were harvested from a property with a history of an ongoing outbreak of photosensitization and abortion in cattle. Six 24‐month‐old steers were cannulated and used in the experiment, two of them served as negative controls. E. contortisiliquum pods were administered to four steers through ruminal cannula. In the first phase of the experiment, daily doses of 30 g/kg/body weight (bw) and 20 g/kg/bw were administered to Bovines 1 and 2 respectively, for three consecutive days. In the second phase, starting four days after the last daily feeding of the pods, these two bovines were challenged with the same doses of the pods for three consecutive days and another two steers (Bovines 3 and 4) were fed 15 g/kg/bw each for three consecutive days. In the two phases, the steers developed signs compatible with ruminal acidosis which were more severe during the second phase. Three and five days after the administration of the pods, two steers presented photodermatitis characterized by hyperemia and edema on the skin of the dorsum of the neck, of the shaved skin around the cannula, of muzzle and ear. Lesions evolved to dermal necrosis with sloughing and subsequent scar retraction and dermal thickening. Ulceration of mucosae exposed to sunlight was also observed. All the steers which received the pods had significant elevations in the serum activities of gamma‐glutamyl transferase (GGT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST). The levels of GGT and AST remained elevated for up to 12 days after the administration of the pods was discontinued. Histopathological hepatic changes detected by liver biopsies were hepatocellular swelling and randomly scattered individual hepatocellular necrosis. The current study presents solid experimental evidence that the ingestion of E. contortisiliquum definitely induces the classical lesions of hepatogenous photosensitization in cattle. HIGHLIGHTSThe poisonous by Enterolobium contortisiliquum in cattle causes phosensitization.Photosensitization tends to develop in those bovines that survive the acute phase of gastrointestinal disturbances.The phosensitization is of the hepatogenous type.Hepatotoxic is demonstrable by clinical pathology and liver biopsy.
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2015
Tatiane C. Faccin; Ricardo Carneiro Brumatti; Stephanie C. Lima; Renata Cunha Madureira; Carlos Eurico dos Santos Fernandes; Glaucia D. Kommers; Ricardo A.A. Lemos
Chronic ingestion of Brachiaria spp. by cattle causes in the liver fibrosis, atrophy of left lobe, compensatory hypertrophy of the right lobe, and bile duct proliferation. Typically, these lesions are associated with accumulation in the hepatic parenchyma of cluster with foamy macrophages. This study surveyed bovine livers with those lesions in a slaughterhouse in Central Brazil and estimated the economic losses caused by condemnation of such affected livers. During the study period, 488,476 cattle were slaughter in this particular abattoir. From 5,295 livers condemned due to fibrosis, 192 with lesions were sampled and studied. Economic calculations permitted to infer that the condemnations represented a loss of R
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2014
Ariany Carvalho dos Santos; Franklin Riet-Correa; Rubiane F Heckler; Stephanie C. Lima; Mariana L Silva; Renato Rezende; Nilton M. Carvalho; Ricardo A.A. Lemos
108,817.60. It is concluded that the condemnation of livers due to brachiaria-induced fibrosis causes significant economic losses for the meat industry due to condemnation of 23.6 tons of beef liver with an estimate annual loss of more than R
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2016
Fábio B. Rosa; Mara Iolanda Batistella Rubin; Tessie B. Martins; Ricardo A.A. Lemos; Danilo Carloto Gomes; Rayane Chitolina Pupin; Stephanie C. Lima; Claudio S.L. Barros
100,000.00 in a single slaughterhouse.
Semina-ciencias Agrarias | 2014
Flávia Barbieri Bacha; Tatiane Cargnin Faccin; Stephanie C. Lima; Cássia Rejane Brito Leal; Ricardo A.A. Lemos
With the objective to assess whether repeated non-toxic doses of sodium monofluoroacetate (MFA) induce resistance to poisoning by this compound, 18 sheep were randomly divided into two experimental groups of nine animals each. Sheep from Group 1 ingested non-lethal increasing doses of MFA for six periods: 0.05mg/kg for 5 days; 0.08mg/kg for 4 days; 0.08mg/kg for 4 days; 0.1mg/kg for 3 days; 0.1mg/kg for 3 days and 0.25mg/kg for 3 days. Between the first and second period of administration and between the second and third period the animals did not receive MFA for 10 consecutive days, between the third and fourth period and during the remaining periods of administration the sheep were left 15 days without ingesting MFA. Group 2 was not adapted to the ingestion of MFA and received a single dose of 1mg/kg of MFA at the same time that Group 1 was challenged. After challenge, seven sheep of Group 1 showed clinical signs of poisoning and one sheep recovered. In Group 2, all animals showed clinical signs of poisoning by MFA, however two sheep recovered. The mortality rate was 66.6% in Group 1 and 77.7% for Group 2. These results suggest that repeated administration of non-toxic doses of MFA does not protect against acute poisoning by this compound; therefore other alternatives of prophylaxis for poisoning by plants containing MFA should be searched, mainly the use of intraruminal bacteria that hydrolyze MFA.
Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia | 2016
Alice R. Oliveira; Marcelo Augusto de Araújo; Paulo Ha Jardim; Stephanie C. Lima; Paula V. Leal; Fabrício O. Frazílio
An outbreak of Brachiaria decumbens poisoning in goats in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, is described. Out of a herd of about 1,000 goats, seven goats died after showing photosensitivity (3 out 7 goats) and icterus (4/7). Other clinical signs included lethargy, dehydration and weight loss (7/7). At necropsy there was either hepatomegaly or liver atrophy; orange, yellow or gray discoloration - were observed in the liver of six goats. Two had accentuation of lobular pattern and punctate, linear or stellar fibrous depressions were randomly distributedover the capsular surface. Macroscopic changesattributedto liver failure consisting of hydropericardium (2/7) and ascites (2/7) were observed. Histologically, there was accumulation of refringent crystals in the bile ducts and infiltration of foamy macrophages in the liver of all goats. Foamy macrophages were also present in the hepatic and mesenteric lymph nodes of two goats. The diagnosis of B. decumbens poisoning was based on epidemiology, clinical signs, necropsy findings and histopathology.
Pesquisa Veterinaria Brasileira | 2018
Juliana Paniago Lordello de Paula; Paula V. Leal; Rayane Chitolina Pupin; Stephanie C. Lima; Marcos A.S. Souza; Alexandre A. Santos; Ricardo A.A. Lemos; Danilo Carloto Gomes
Revista Acadêmica: Ciência Animal | 2017
Ricardo A.A. Lemos; Stephanie C. Lima
Brazilian Journal of Veterinary Medicine | 2017
Tatiane Cargnin Faccin; Rayane Chitolina Pupin; Paula V. Leal; Ariany Carvalho dos Santos; Stephanie C. Lima; Valquiria Barbosa Nantes Ferreira; Walmir Silva Garcez; Ricardo A.A. Lemos