Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Mimosa tenuiflora causes birth defects in goats in Brazil
By Pimentel, L A et al.·Published in Veterinary pathology·2007·Hospital Veteriná, Brazil·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Mimosa tenuiflora as a cause of malformations in ruminants in the northeastern Brazilian semiarid rangelands.
- Species:
- goat
Plain-English summary
A group of pregnant goats in Brazil was fed a plant called Mimosa tenuiflora to see if it caused birth defects in their kids. The goats that ate this plant had four kids, three of which were born with serious malformations, including cleft lip and eye problems. In contrast, the goats that were fed a different plant, Prosopis juliflora, and a control group delivered normal kids. This study suggests that Mimosa tenuiflora is linked to the birth defects seen in ruminants grazing in the area.
People also search for: goat pregnancy problems · Mimosa tenuiflora effects on goats · goat kids with cleft lip · ruminant malformations causes
Abstract
Craniofacial anomalies, eye malformations, and permanent flexures of the forelimbs are common malformations seen in ruminants grazing semiarid rangelands of Northeastern Brazil. To investigate the cause of these malformations, we fed 2 suspected plants, Mimosa tenuiflora or Prosopis juliflora, to groups of 4 pregnant goats each. Fresh green M. tenuiflora was collected daily and fed ad libitum to 4 goats in group 1 throughout pregnancy. This treatment group also received a supplemental feed concentrate equivalent to 1% body weight. Four goats in group 2 received a ration with 70% of P. juliflora pods and 30% hay throughout pregnancy. Four control goats were fed supplemental feed concentrate (1% body weight) and hay ad libitum throughout pregnancy. Goats treated with P. juliflora pods and the control goats delivered 9 normal kids. The four goats that were fed M. tenuiflora during pregnancy delivered 4 kids, 3 of which had abnormalities similar to those observed in field cases, including cleft lip, unilateral corneal opacity, ocular bilateral dermoids, buphthalmos with a cloudy brownish appearance of the anterior chamber due to an iridal cyst, and segmental stenosis of the colon. Malformations induced experimentally by M. tenuiflora were similar to those observed in field cases, suggesting that M. tenuiflora is a cause of the field cases observed in the Brazilian semiarid rangelands.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18039908/