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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Sheep skin damage from Brachiaria ruziziensis grass photosensitization

By Diamantino, Gabriella M L et al.·Published in Toxicon : official journal of the International Society on Toxinology·2020·Departamento de Cl&#xed, Brazil·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Photosensitization by Brachiaria ruziziensis in a sheep herd.

Species:
sheep
Skin & coat

Plain-English summary

A group of mixed-breed sheep, including Santa Inês and Lacaune, developed serious skin and liver problems after grazing on Brachiaria ruziziensis grass. The sheep showed symptoms like jaundice (yellowing of the skin and eyes), lethargy, dehydration, and swelling of the face, particularly the ears. A veterinary examination revealed liver damage and skin necrosis. The issue was linked to toxins in the grass and a high level of spores from a fungus that can cause these reactions. Monitoring sheep on this type of pasture is essential to prevent photosensitization.

People also search for: sheep jaundice symptoms · photosensitization in sheep · Brachiaria ruziziensis toxicity · sheep liver disease treatment

Abstract

Some species of the genus Brachiaria are cultivated worldwide in tropical and subtropical climate regions as the main feed for ruminants. Several studies report photosensitization by Brachiaria decumbens, Brachiaria brizantha, and Brachiaria humidicola, but the poisoning by Brachiaria ruziziensis have been reported only twice. Cutaneous and hepatic lesions may be caused by the steroidal saponins present in the leaves or by the mycotoxin sporidesmin produced by the saprophyte fungus Pithomyces chartarum. The present report describes the clinical and pathological changes observed in an outbreak of hepatogenic photosensitization in sheep kept in B. ruziziensis pastures. In addition, the present study will provide a better understanding of the etiology of this photosensitization through the evaluation of the saponin protodioscin and the spore count of P. chartarum. Santa Inês and Lacaune mixed-breed sheep showed signs of photosensitization after feeding B. ruziziensis. Clinical signs included jaundice, apathy, dehydration, and photosensitization characterized by facial edema and cutaneous scars, especially in the ears. Pathological examination of the liver revealed diffuse infiltrates of foamy cells, rare multinucleated cells, and mild enlargement of hepatocytes (megalocytosis). The skin showed acute epidermal and dermal necrosis with occlusive thrombi. B. ruziziensis showed low levels of protodioscin (0.020 ± 0.024% in mature leaves and 0.065 ± 0.084% in sprouts) but high P. chartarum spore counts (mean of 479,844 ± 443,951 spores/g plant). Thus, sheep grazing B. ruziziensis pastures must be closely monitored because of the risk of photosensitization.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32598988/