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Even when poisoning is not fatal, it is very apt to produce abortion.
POISONING BY BRYONY.
In large doses all parts of the bryony plant are toxic—the root,
stalk, and leaves.
Bryony is sometimes used as a purgative. Poisoning is
characterised by nausea, sweating, diuresis, frequent action of the
bowels, and, in grave cases, by tetaniform convulsions followed by
death.
Cotton cake forms a rich food, which fattens animals very rapidly,
but given in excess may produce true poisoning, and if prepared
from undecorticated seed may produce mechanical irritation ending
in obstruction of the bowel.
The latter accident occurs only in the sheep. It consists in
obstruction of the omasum (œsophageal gutter), and particularly of
the abomasum, by the woody seed covering, the fibres of which
become agglutinated and close the pyloric opening, just as do the
fragments of wool or the hairs in animals affected with the licking
habit (pica, depraved appetite). The mass thus formed passes into
the intestine, and is apt to become fixed at some point and to cause
death.
In the ox, as in the sheep, true poisoning may result from the
action of an injurious principle which Cornevin discovered in the
seed and particularly in the meal. The relative rarity of such
accidents is explained by the composition of the cakes, which are rich
in husks but poor in meal.
In the first series of accidents the symptoms resemble those
produced by the intestinal obstructions peculiar to the licking
disease; in the second they appear about the eighth to the fifteenth
day, and are indicated by sensitiveness of the abdomen and by efforts
to pass urine. The urine is albuminous; at a later stage it becomes
darker in colour, reddish, and stained with hæmoglobin. The mucous
membranes exhibit a sub-icteric tint.
Lesions. The liver shows interstitial hepatitis, consequent on
changes in the hepatic cells due to the poisonous principle. The
kidney first shows lesions of interstitial, but afterwards of epithelial,
nephritis; the endothelium of the tubes appears to be undergoing
proliferation.
Treatment should only be undertaken when the organic lesions
seem trifling, and suggest the possibility of cure without excessive
outlay. Under such circumstances it is sufficient to remove the cause
and to supply proper diet.
The above is sufficient for ten animals, and a dose should be given
daily for a period of six days in a small quantity of bran. Treatment is
completed by abundant nourishment, and by distributing about the
pastures pieces of rock-salt suitably protected.
Many other vermicides or vermifuges have been suggested, but are
less easy to use. They comprise essence of turpentine, mixtures of oil
with essence of turpentine and benzine, picrate of potash in doses of
7 to 20 grains per day, ethereal extract of male fern, etc.
LUMBRICOSIS OF CALVES.