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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Dog with vomiting and seizures after metaldehyde poisoning

By Botelho, Ana Flávia Machado et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2020·Department of Veterinary Medicine, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Fatal metaldehyde poisoning in a dog confirmed by gas chromatography.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

An eleven-month-old male German Spitz was brought to the emergency vet after he started vomiting and having seizures just three hours after accidentally eating a pesticide that contained metaldehyde. He showed severe symptoms, including confusion, excessive drooling, and difficulty breathing, but despite aggressive treatment, he became comatose and sadly passed away. A necropsy revealed damage to his liver and brain, and tests confirmed the presence of metaldehyde in his system. This case highlights the dangers of metaldehyde poisoning in dogs, which is rare but can be fatal.

People also search for: dog vomiting and seizures · metaldehyde poisoning in dogs · German Spitz emergency care · dog pesticide ingestion symptoms

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Metaldehyde is a toxic pesticide used mainly as a molluscicide, responsible for intoxication and deaths in both humans and animals. Accidental exposure to metaldehyde in dogs is considered rare, but severe. Data concerning clinical and veterinary forensic toxicology are largely incomplete, especially regarding case reports in dogs. The present work reports a complete and detailed description of a case from the history, clinical evolution, pathological exams and toxicological diagnosis in an accidental case of metaldehyde poisoning in dog. CASE PRESENTATION: An eleven-month-old, 3.0 kg, male German Spitz was presented for emergency care with acute vomiting and seizures 3 hours after suspected accidental ingestion of commercial molluscicide containing 3% metaldehyde (Lesmax®). The animal was in lateral recumbency and showed stuporous mentation, salivation, tonic-clonic status epilepticus, systemic tremors, bilateral miosis, absent palpebral, corneal, oculovestibular and gag reflexes, severely depressed spinal reflexes, dyspnea and tachycardia. Despite treatment, the patient progressed to comatose mentation and died. Necropsy examination revealed discrete lesions in the liver and central nervous system, while stomach examination revealed content of feed, activated charcoal and blue-green granules, compatible to the commercial formula of metaldehyde. Histology examination revealed extensive hemorrhage and severe centrolobular necrosis of the liver and tumefaction of Kupfer cells. Brain samples showed discrete hemorrhage and hyperemia. In order to confirm the diagnosis, samples from feces, stomach content, spleen, liver, heart, kidneys and brain were submitted gas chromatography analysis. Results confirmed the presence of metaldehyde in all samples. We describe clinicopathological abnormalities of a fatal case of metaldehyde poisoning in a dog, as well as postmortem diagnosis using gas chromatography. CONCLUSION: Metaldehyde poisoning is rarely reported, since the diagnosis is often difficult and the notifications scarce. To our knowledge, this is the first report describing clinical signs, pathological findings and chromatographic diagnosis. This report aims to contribute to the understanding of the pathogenesis of metaldehyde intoxication, to further explore veterinary forensic toxicology diagnosis.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32414366/