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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Sheep drank copper sulfate footbath and got poisoned

By Ortolani, Enrico Lippi et al.·Published in Veterinary and human toxicology·2004·Department of Clinical Science, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Acute sheep poisoning from a copper sulfate footbath.

Species:
sheep
Stomach & digestion

Plain-English summary

A flock of Corriedale sheep developed footrot and were treated with antibiotics and a copper sulfate footbath. Unfortunately, many sheep drank the footbath solution after being without water for over 17 hours, leading to acute copper poisoning. Symptoms included loss of appetite, lethargy, grinding teeth, and dark diarrhea. Six severely affected sheep were treated with various medications and fluids, but two did not survive. The remaining sheep showed improvement and recovered without treatment.

People also search for: sheep copper poisoning symptoms · footrot treatment in sheep · sheep drinking footbath solution effects

Abstract

An outbreak of footrot occurred in a flock of Corriedale sheep; 27 animals were treated with antibiotic and footbathed in a 5% copper sulfate solution. Being deprived of water for > 17 h, many sheep drank the footbath solution. After 6 h 16 sheep became ill with acute copper poisoning, 10 animals died within 10 h; 6 were severely ill and were sent to Veterinary Hospital, and 4 had mild signs and recovered without treatment. The sick sheep had anorexia, dullness, grinding teeth, moaning, rumen atony, dehydration, dark blue-green diarrheic feces and congested membranes. They were treated with 3.4 mg tetrathiomolybdate/kg body weight and lactated Ringer's solution iv, oral molybdate, sulfate, kaolin and pectin, and drenched with antacids. Two of the 6 sheep died during hospitalization. The ingestion of copper solution caused an intense gastrointestinal injury that resulted in ulcers, petechial and echymotic hemorrhages in the mucosa, mild hemolysis detected by microscopic hemoglobinuria and a lowered packed cell volume, severe hepatic injury that raised the AST and gammaGT blood values, and moderate kidney lesions with increasing serum blood urea and nitrogen creatinine levels.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15587248/