N91 - Poisoning by a photosensitizing plant
Synonyms
No known synonym
Name of the disease in English
Poisoning by a photosensitizing plant
The disease in brief
Photosensitization which makes the skin very sensitive to light can come from plant poisoning:
-Plants containing a photosensitizing substance cause primary photosensitization: Lady's thumb (Plygonum persicaria), buckwheat (Fagopyrum sp.), St. John's wort (Hypericum sp.),forage legumes: White clover (Trifolium repens), hybrid clover (Trifolium hybridum), alfalfa (Medicago sativa), vetch (Vicia sp.)
-Plants hepatotoxic such as lupin (Lupinus sp.), sorghum (Sorghum sp.) and sporidesmin (a mycotoxin that develops on dried grass when the rain returns): They cause secondary photosensitization.
-There phylloerythrin, photosensitizing, is a derivative of chlorophyll which is formed in the digestive tract of ruminants and evacuated partly in the feces, partly by the liver via the bile if all goes well; if liver function is impaired or the evacuation of bile is prevented, phyloerythrin is found in the blood and in the skin. It causes secondary photosensitization.
Clinic & diagnosis
Photosensitization is suspected when specific lesions are seen in specific locations or with particular behavior:
-The hair is bristling, or the skin is red and painful to the touch, then the skin loses its hair, takes on a burnt or cardboard appearance (sometimes peeling off in shreds), finally becomes crusty, thickened and grayish.
-These lesions are limited to white or light skin, or hairless areas, or the udder or teats or muzzle or lips; or the bovine may fear light, be restless or exhibit colic-like symptoms by tapping its belly.
The animal may present hyperthermia
Typical sign of the disease
No description
Pictures
See below
Diagnostic formulas
No description
Differential diagnosis
-Leptospirosis UR15
– Intoxication/Senecio-N27
– Congenital calf porphyria OR “pink tooth disease” – DR42
Confirm a suspicion?
The toxic plant can be found by a field survey. It is also possible to confirm secondary photosensitization by taking blood on EDTA to measure gamma GT, which is a marker of cholestasis.
Prognosis and treatment
Put the cattle in the shade and protect them from the toxin, but also put in place:
-Anti-inflammatory treatment is useful in non-pregnant patients:
- Local treatment of skin lesions (disinfection, protective creams)
The prognosis is reserved in all cases; photosensitization secondary to liver damage may remain of no economic value after recovery.
Prevention
Identify risky plants in cattle feed or their environment; remove them from the ration or reduce their quantity; deprive cattle of access to risky wild plants.
References
Jouve C. (2009) Contribution to the development of a website on plant toxicology in ruminants: Monographs of the main plants incriminated according to data from the CNITV-Th. Med .Vet. Université Claude Bernard-Lyon1 271p