Results 171 to 180 of about 2,331 (204)
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Diagnostic Guidelines for Ruminant Toxicoses

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 2011
Management of poisoning is best accomplished when an accurate diagnosis is made and enhanced by attention to five major diagnostic criteria: history, clinical signs, clinical laboratory evaluation, lesions, and chemical analysis. Used properly, all of these factors allow for a better understanding of clinical poisoning.
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Occurrence and clinical manifestations of trichothecene toxicoses and zearalenone toxicoses

1986
Fusarium spp. are common fungi throughout the world. They occur as pathogens of plants and contaminants in feeds and grains. Many different chemical toxins have been recognized and isolated from a variety of Fusarium molds. There has been world wide concern for certain of these toxic metabolites, particularly since World War II and the recognition that
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Environmental and Miscellaneous Toxicoses in Reptiles

2020
329
Orós Montón, Jorge Ignacio   +2 more
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Diagnostic Pathology of Equine Toxicoses

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice
This article is intended to highlight toxicosis-associated pathology in horses that might be observed by a clinician in the living animal and at gross necropsy. When the clinician is aware of these pathologic changes (particularly when coupled with a suggestive environmental or herd history), then collaboration with a diagnostic laboratory can begin to
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Toxicoses of the Ruminant Nervous System

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Food Animal Practice, 2017
This article discusses the etiology, mechanism of action, clinical signs, and diagnostic tests used to identify toxic agents that affect the nervous system of ruminants. The article is not intended to be an exhaustive review of each agent, but a reference for establishing a differential diagnosis when toxic agents are suspected as the cause of central ...
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A Review of Ferret Toxicoses

Journal of Exotic Pet Medicine, 2015
Within the past 20 years, ferrets have steadily gained popularity as a household pet. Owing to their small size, ability to climb, and explore under furniture and behind appliances, curious ferrets are often exposed to misplaced items. This ability to search secluded areas within the house provides opportunities for the animal to interface with toxic ...
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Tick Toxicoses of Cattle

1981
Of the 800 tick species which have thus far been described, populations or strains of approximately 50 argasids and ixodids are potentially capable of causing pathological and/or pathophysiological changes through inoculation of unknown uninfectious noxes during repletion. These noxes are generally interpreted as toxins.
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Pharmaceutical Toxicoses

Journal of Exotic Pet Medicine, 2015
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[Toxicoses of ticks (Acari: Ixodida)].

Wiadomosci parazytologiczne, 2006
Toxins have been shown to present in the salivary glands, whole body extracts, and eggs of ticks. They cause histological lesions in the skin, and in various organs of tick hosts. Among toxicoses, tick paralysis is of the greatest medical and veterinary importance. Toxins are secreted by cells "b" of acinus II in salivary glands during tick feeding.
A, Buczek   +4 more
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Ergot and Fescue Toxicoses

2018
Ramesh C. Gupta   +2 more
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