Encephalopathy caused by Talisia esculenta intoxication in pregnant ewes and their newborn lambs.
Valdir M AlmeidaGivaldo B Silva-FilhoHisadora A S C BomSilvio Miguel Castillo FonsecaFranklin Riet-CorreaFrancisco Alejandro UzalKevin D WoolardFrancisco A L SouzaFábio S MendonçaPublished in: Journal of veterinary diagnostic investigation : official publication of the American Association of Veterinary Laboratory Diagnosticians, Inc (2021)
An outbreak of acute encephalopathy occurred in pregnant ewes and their newborn lambs associated with consumption of Talisia esculenta fruits and bark. Clinical signs in 5 adult pregnant ewes included drooling, bloat, tachypnea, depression, ataxia, body shaking, difficulty in rising, and recumbency. Three neonatal lambs born to some of those ewes had similar clinical signs. No significant gross abnormalities were observed on autopsy. Histologically, neuronal necrosis, axonal and dendritic swelling, and loss of Purkinje neurons were observed in the cerebellum. The observation of similar neurologic clinical signs and lesions in pregnant ewes and their neonatal lambs suggests that the toxic principle of T. esculenta crosses the placenta and reaches the fetus.