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Diferencia??o das intoxica??es por Brachiaria spp e Pithomyces chartarum atrav?s dos aspectos epidemiol?gicos, cl?nico-patol?gicos e toxicol?gicos. / Differentiation between Brachiaria spp and Pithomyces chartarum poisonings through their epidemiological, clinical, pathological and toxicological aspects.

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Previous issue date: 2009-02-18 / Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Cient?fico e Tecnol?gico / Numerous outbreaks of photosensitization in herbivorous animals maintained on Brachiaria
pastures occur in Brazil, and the economic losses caused are of great concern due to the large
areas in the country planted with this grass. The vast majority of outbreaks has been attributed
to the sporidesmin containing spores of Pithomyces chartarum, a fungus which occurs in
many countries of temperate climate. However, there are differences between the liver lesions
in animals that develop photosensitization on pastures of Brachiaria spp and the ones
described in P. chartarum poisoning. In several outbreaks reported from Brazil, no evidence
for toxicity of the spores was revealed. As the isolation of toxic saponins from Brachiaria
grasses has been reported in the literature, the real cause of the photosensitization in Brazil
needs to be clarified, in order to be able to adopt correct preventive measures to avoid the
condition. The main objective of this study was to show the different epidemiological,
clinical, pathological and toxicological aspects of the two poisonings, based on data from the
literature and our own observations of pithomycotoxicosis in Portugal and on the data of the
photosensitization which occurs on Brachiaria pastures in Brazil. We concluded that the
saponin content of the grass is be responsible for the outbreaks of photosensitizing disease
which occur annually on Brazilian pastures. / Numerosos surtos de fotossensibiliza??o em animais mantidos em pastos de Brachiaria spp
v?m ocorrendo no Brasil e as perdas econ?micas resultantes t?m sido foco de preocupa??o,
em especial devido ?s grandes ?reas cultivadas dessa gram?nea no pa?s. A maioria dessas
ocorr?ncias vem sendo atribu?das ? esporidesmina, presente em esporos do fungo Pithomyces
chartarum, que ocorre em muitos pa?ses de clima temperado. No entanto, h? diferen?as entre
o aspecto an?tomo-histopatol?gico verificado no f?gado de animais que desenvolvem
fotossensibiliza??o em pastos de Brachiaria spp e o descrito na intoxica??o por P. chartarum.
Nos diversos surtos relatados no Brasil n?o se conseguiu demonstrar a toxidez dos esporos.
Como o isolamento de saponinas t?xicas tem sido reportado em pastagens de Brachiaria, a
causa dos surtos de fotossensibiliza??o no Brasil precisa ser esclarecida, para que corretas
medidas preventivas sejam adotadas e, a doen?a evitada. Este trabalho tem por objetivo
principal demonstrar, atrav?s das diferen?as epidemiol?gicas, cl?nico-patol?gicas e
toxicol?gicas peculiares ?s duas condi??es, colhidas na literatura e confrontadas com nossas
pr?prias observa??es sobre pitomicotoxicose em Portugal e intoxica??o pela Brachiaria sp no
Brasil, que as saponinas contidas na Brachiaria sp s?o respons?veis pelos surtos de
fotossensibiliza??o que ocorrem anualmente nas pastagens brasileiras.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:IBICT/oai:localhost:tede/848
Date18 February 2009
CreatorsSeixas, Josilene Nascimento
ContributorsTokarnia, Carlos Maria Ant?nio Hubinger
PublisherUniversidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, Curso de P?s-Gradua??o em Ci?ncias Veterin?rias, UFRRJ, Brasil, Parasitologia Veterin?ria
Source SetsIBICT Brazilian ETDs
LanguagePortuguese
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion, info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcereponame:Biblioteca Digital de Teses e Dissertações da UFRRJ, instname:Universidade Federal Rural do Rio de Janeiro, instacron:UFRRJ
Rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

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