Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Signs, treatment, and late seizures after metaldehyde poisoning
By Dutil, Guillaume Fabien & Berny, Philippe·Published in Open veterinary journal·2023·Division of Neurology and Neurosurgery, France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A prospective study on clinical signs, management, outcomes, and delayed neurologic sequelae due to metaldehyde poisoning in 26 dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 26 dogs was treated for metaldehyde poisoning, which can occur from ingesting slug bait. Symptoms included uncoordinated movements, seizures, excessive drooling, and tremors. Treatment involved giving activated charcoal, inducing vomiting, and providing intravenous fluids, along with anticonvulsants like diazepam for those having seizures. Most dogs, about 81%, survived the poisoning, and those that received activated charcoal or vomiting treatment all recovered. Follow-up showed that none of the dogs that survived experienced any long-term neurological issues or seizures after three years.
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Abstract
BACKGROUND: Metaldehyde poisoning in dogs is well known and described issue. Several studies focused on the incidence, epidemiological features, and clinical and pathological findings associated with this intoxication. However, there are no prospective studies of metaldehyde poisoning and late-onset seizures. AIMS: To prospectively describe clinical signs, therapeutic management, outcomes, and delayed-onset seizures due to metaldehyde poisoning in dogs. METHODS: A 15-month prospective study on dogs with a diagnosis of metaldehyde poisoning, either via phone call to the animal poison control center or analysis at the toxicology laboratory in Lyon, France. Clinical signs, therapeutic management and outcomes, and the late onset of seizures were assessed for at least 3 years. RESULTS: Twenty-six dogs were enrolled in the study. The most prevalent clinical signs were ataxia (18 dogs), convulsions (17), hypersalivation (15), and tremors (15). Treatment was symptomatic (e.g., activated charcoal, emetic therapy, and intravenous fluids) with anticonvulsant therapy (mainly diazepam). The overall survival rate was 81% (21/26 dogs). All dogs that received active charcoal (11/11) or emetic therapy (4/4) survived. Twelve of 17 dogs had convulsions and survived; 9 were followed up for at least 3 years after poisoning, and none had any other seizure episode or neurological sequelae. CONCLUSION: This prospective study describes clinical signs, therapeutic management and outcome of metaldehyde poisoning in dogs, and late-onset neurologic sequelae. None of the nine cases that were followed for 3 years developed neurological signs after metaldehyde poisoning. Therefore, long-term antiepileptic therapy is not indicated.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37304610/