Results 201 to 210 of about 7,054 (253)
Saxitoxin in Alaskan commercial crab species. [PDF]
Tester PA +6 more
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Cause of death in experimental paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP).
Evans Mh
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Paralytic shellfish poison; bases accompanying the poison.
B, RIEGEL, D W, STANGER
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Paralytic shellfish poisoning and palytoxin poisoning in dogs
Veterinary Record, 2020Background Fatal cases of exposure to paralytic shellfish toxins and palytoxins have occurred in companion animals but are poorly described. Methods We describe one case of paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) and three cases of ...
Nicola Bates, Andrew D Turner
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Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning: A Review
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, 1977SUMMARY Paralytic shellfish poisoning (psp) in man results from the consumption of mussels, clams, and oysters that have fed on toxic dinoflagellates. Motile, marine protozoa of the dinoflagellate group often produce “blooms,” i.e., red tides, which color the sea. Not all genera or species are toxic to fish and mammals, nor are the toxic principles the
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Lethal Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning in Guatemala
The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1990An outbreak of paralytic shellfish poisoning occurred in Champerico, on the Pacific coast of Guatemala, July-August 1987. Of 187 people affected with characteristic neurologic symptoms, 26 died. A case study implicated a species of clam, Amphichaena kindermani, harvested from local beaches as the vehicle of the neurotoxins (saxitoxins).
D C, Rodrigue +7 more
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Paralytic shellfish poisoning in Southern China
Toxicon, 1996The rapidly expanding mariculture and commercial region along the southern coast of China has experienced sporadic outbreaks of paralytic shellfish poisoning for nearly 30 years, yet virtually nothing is known of the nature of that toxicity or of the causative organisms.
D M, Anderson +5 more
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Toxicologic studies on paralytic shellfish poison
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1960Abstract The acute LD50's for a highly purified preparation of paralytic shellfish poison in mice were determined for the oral (263 μg/kg), intraperitoneal (10.0 μg/kg), and intravenous (3.4 μg/kg) routes. Female mice were more susceptible than males to lethal doses of the poison. Increases of pH of the injection medium or the addition of sodium ions
G S, WIBERG, N R, STEPHENSON
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