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California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, CA (LWW, MSF, MCB, BP); and Crossroads Veterinary Clinic, Anderson, CA (LDR, JSA)
Three horses died as a result of eating grass hay containing summer pheasant's eye (Adonis aestivalis L.), a plant containing cardenolides similar to oleander and foxglove. A 9-year-old thoroughbred gelding, a 20-year-old appaloosa gelding, and a 5-year-old quarter horse gelding initially presented with signs of colic 2448 hours after first exposure to the hay. Gastrointestinal gaseous distension was the primary finding on clinical examination of all three horses. Two horses became moribund and were euthanatized 1 day after first showing clinical signs, and the third horse was euthanatized after 4 days of medical therapy. Endocardial hemorrhage and gaseous distension of the gastrointestinal tract were the only necropsy findings in the first two horses. On microscopic examination, both horses had scattered foci of mild, acute myocardial necrosis and neutrophilic inflammation associated with endocardial and epicardial hemorrhage. The third horse that survived for 4 days had multifocal to coalescing, irregular foci of acute, subacute, and chronic myocardial degeneration and necrosis. A. aestivalis (pheasant's eye, summer adonis) was identified in the hay. Strophanthidin, the aglycone of several cardenolides present in Adonis spp., was detected by liquid chromatographymass spectrometrymass spectrometry in gastrointestinal contents from all three horses. Although Adonis spp. contain cardiac glycosides, cardiac lesions have not previously been described in livestock associated with consumption of adonis, and this is the first report of adonis toxicosis in North America.
Key words: Adonis aestivalis; adonis toxicosis; colic; equine; myocardial degeneration; myocarditis; pheasant's eye; strophanthin; summer adonis.
Request reprints from Dr. L. W. Woods, California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System, School of Veterinary Medicine, PO Box 1770, Davis, CA 95617-1770 (USA). lwwoods{at}ucdavis.edu.
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L. W. Woods, L. W. George, M. L. Anderson, D. M. Woods, M. S. Filigenzi, and B. Puschner Evaluation of the toxicity of Adonis aestivalis in calves J Vet Diagn Invest, September 1, 2007; 19(5): 581 - 585. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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