4.0 Article

SIDA CARPINIFOLIA (MALVACEAE) POISONING IN FALLOW DEER (DAMA DAMA)

Journal

JOURNAL OF ZOO AND WILDLIFE MEDICINE
Volume 40, Issue 3, Pages 583-585

Publisher

AMER ASSOC ZOO VETERINARIANS
DOI: 10.1638/2009-0029.1

Keywords

deer; lysosomal storage disease; lectin histochemistry; poisoning; Sida carpinifolia; swainsonine-containing plants

Funding

  1. The Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior
  2. Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cientifico e Tecnologico, Brazil

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A captive fallow deer (Dania dama) in a zoo was spontaneously poisoned after consumption of Sida carpinifolia. The paddock where cervids were kept was severely infested by S. carpinifolia. The deer developed a neurological syndrome characterized by muscular weakness, intention tremors, visual and standing-up deficits, falls, and abnormal behavior and posture. Because it severe mandibular fracture and the consequent deteriorating condition, it was euthanized. Main microscopic findings were swelling and multifocal cytoplasmic vacuolation in the Purkinje cells. The cytoplasm of multiple cells of the cerebellum, especially the Purkinje cells, stained with the lectins Concanavalia ensiformis, Triticum vulgaris, and succinylated Triticum vulgaris. Diagnostic possibilities such as bovine diarrhea virus, rabies, and transmissible spongiform encephalopathy were excluded. The report focuses on the risk of maintaining S. carpinifolia populations in zoo enclosures of wild herbivores.

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