lolitrem-b has been researched along with Ataxia* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for lolitrem-b and Ataxia
Article | Year |
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Clinical expression of lolitrem B (perennial ryegrass) intoxication in horses.
Perennial ryegrass staggers is purported to be a common neurological mycotoxicosis of horses but the case description lacks detail and evidence.. To describe the clinical syndrome of lolitrem B intoxication in horses, limiting tests to those that are applicable to clinical practice, and to assess the potential value of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) tests for lolitrem B in horse body fluids.. Seven horses in 2 separate groups were fed perennial ryegrass seed and hay containing 2 ppm lolitrem B. Paired data were collected prior to and after 2 weeks exposure to lolitrem B, including video-documented neurological examination and clinical examination.. All horses developed a variable degree of tremor and ataxia when exposed to lolitrem B. Tremor depended on the level of activity and included a subtle, rapid tremor of the eyeball. Ataxia was exaggerated by blindfolding and primarily involved a truncal sway and irregular, but predictable, limb placements. No change was detected in urine lolitrem B levels and, although plasma lolitrem B increased during the treatment period, levels did not correlate with the severity of clinical signs displayed. Limb swelling, heel lesions and serous nasal discharge were also observed in horses most severely intoxicated.. The clinical effects of lolitrem B intoxication in horses primarily involve action-related tremors and symmetrical vestibular ataxia. Ergovaline may have caused the limb swelling, heel lesions and serous nasal discharge. Plasma ELISA for lolitrem B may be of diagnostic use in the future.. This study provides a clearer appreciation of the clinical signs and variability of perennial ryegrass intoxication in horses. Topics: Animal Feed; Animals; Ataxia; Ergotamines; Female; Horse Diseases; Horses; Indole Alkaloids; Lolium; Male; Mycotoxins; Plant Poisoning; Plants, Toxic; Seeds; Tremor | 2012 |
[Rhinopneumonia or mycotoxin intoxication? Neurologic phenomena in horses from a riding school].
In the course of several days most of the 40 riding-school horses turned out in paddocks developed ataxia of variable severity. Five of these horses showed severe ataxia and tremors, became paralyzed and were euthanized. Eleven privately-owned horses which were stabled on the same premises showed no clinical signs. The most likely diagnosis seemed to be the 'neurological form of EHV1', although the signs were not entirely typical. A few weeks later a second outbreak occurred among the riding-school horses and one of the privately-owned horses also showed signs of ataxia. In the meantime it had been shown that EHV1 titers in paired serum samples had not increased and that the cerebrospinal fluid of one of the severely affected horses was normal. Toxicological examination of hay, delivered just before the first outbreak and stored for the winter, showed a significantly increased concentration of lolitrem B mycotoxin (5-6 mg/kg). The hay appeared to have been made of ryegrass used for lawns and playing fields. Retrospectively it became probable that this hay occasionally been fed to the horses just before the onset of clinical problems. It is concluded that the horses showed the 'ryegrass-stagger syndrome'. Topics: Animal Feed; Animals; Ataxia; Diagnosis, Differential; Disease Outbreaks; Herpesviridae Infections; Herpesvirus 1, Equid; Horse Diseases; Horses; Indole Alkaloids; Mycotoxicosis; Mycotoxins; Neurotoxins; Paralysis; Poaceae; Tremor | 1999 |