Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

Poisoning by Senna occidentalis (Leg. Caesalpinoideae) in grazing cattle

Three outbreaks of Senna occidentalis poisoning in cattle exclusively at pasture are described. The outbreaks occurred in the fall and early winter on three farms of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Affected cattle had access to pastures previously used as culture fields for soybean and corn, which were heavily infested by coffee senna (S. occidentalis). On farm 1, 10 (29,1%) out of a total of 34 about 18-month-old heifers died; on farm 2, 9 (4,2%) out of 212 pregnant cows died, and on farm 3, 36 (12,0%) out of 50 adult cattle died. Clinical courses varied from 3 to 6 days, and clinical signs included dark urine, muscle weakness, tremors, staggering gait, sternal recumbency and death. Even when in recumbency, affected cattle remained alert and with normal reflexes; they drunk water and kept their appetite until few hours before death. On farm 2, clinical signs appeared 7 days after the animals had been removed from the coffee senna infested fields. The main gross pathological findings were pale areas in the skeletal muscles, mainly in the heavy muscles of the hindlimbs, and pale yellowish streaks in the myocardium. The main histopathological finding was necrosis of skeletal muscles (multifocal and multiphasic toxic degenerative myopathy). The diagnosis of S. occidentalis poisoning in these three outbreaks was based on the epidemiological and clinical data, the necropsy and histopathological findings.

Poisonous plants; Senna occidentalis; Cassia occidentalis; Leguminosae Caesalpinoideae; diseases of cattle; pathology; myopathy


Colégio Brasileiro de Patologia Animal - CBPA Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira, Caixa Postal 74.591, 23890-000 Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brasil, Tel./Fax: (55 21) 2682-1081 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ - Brazil
E-mail: pvb@pvb.com.br