Selenium
Selenium is similar to sulphur and may replace sulphur in amino acids. Elemental selenium is insoluble in water. • Selenite is extremely toxic and selenate is soluble and toxic. In Ireland, selenium toxicity is known as dog murrain.
Sources:
- Plants have diverse tendencies to accumulate selenium. Eg : Astralagus, oonopsis,Sideranthus, Atriplex.
- Feed supplements, injectable drugs, industrial and commercial sources and seafood are the other sources of selenium.
- Cattle, sheep and horses may graze selenium-containing plants. Swine and poultry may develop toxicosis after consuming grains raised in seleniferous soil. Some of the medicated shampoos also contain selenium.
- Industrial and commercial sources include photoelectric cells, glass and ceramics.
- Fish and shellfish can accumulate selenium that exists naturally in the ocean. But the accumulation is not to a toxic level.
Toxokinetics:
Absorption: Small intestine is the primary absorption site; no absorption takes place in the stomach and rumen.
Distribution: Plasma proteins transport absorbed selenium.
Metabolism: Selenium is metabolized both by reduction and methylation.
Excretion: Urine is the major route of excretion in monogastric animals. Ruminants excrete significant amounts of selenium in the faeces as well.
Mechanism of action: 3-10mg per Kg body weight is lethal for large animals.
- Glutathione depletion and lipid peroxidation are probable important factors in toxicosis.
- Selenium replaces sulphur in amino acids (cysteine and methionine), possibly affecting some essential proteins.
- Chronic selenosis depresses adenosine triphosphate formation possibly by inhibition of sulphydryl enzymes.
- Tissue ascorbic acid levels fall, possibly contributing to the vascular damage caused by selenosis.
CLINICAL SYMPTOMS
Acute:
- Due to ingestion of obligate indicator plants clinical signs are noticed in 1 – 2 hours and animals may die between 2 hours to seven days.
- Symptoms include colic, bloat, dark watery diarrhoea, polyuria, fever, mydriasis, uncertain gait, peculiar rooted-to-one-spot stance with head and ears lowered, fast and weak pulse, pale and cyanotic mucous membrane, blood tinged froth from the nostrils, prostration and death.
Subacute (Blind staggers) :
- Poor appetite, staring coat, wander aimlessly, circling, disregarding obstacles and stumbling over them or walking through them.
- Subnormal temperature, emaciation, swollen eyelids, near blindness. Salivation, lacrimation, severe abdominal pain, inability to swallow, complete paralysis, collapse and death have also been reported.
Chronic (Alkali disease)
- Lameness, hoof and hair abnormalities, partial blindness, paresis, in-coordination, emaciation and lethargy .
- Hoof begins to shed. Shedding is incomplete and old hoof fuses with new hoof and form abnormally long rocker shaped hoof.
- In horses there will be loss of long hair from the mane and tail will occur.
- In cattle, there will be a rough coat, dullness and lack of vitality and emaciation with deprived appetite.
Diagnosis:
Diagnosis is based on clinical signs and estimation of selenium in whole blood and liver.
Treatment:
- Strychnine sulphate 2-5mg/Kg Bd. Wt. Of I/M or S/C.
- Sodium arsenite / Arsenic trioxide: 0.2-0.5 mg/Kg Bd. Wt. Orally.
- High protein diet can prevent selenium poisoning.
- Use of saline purgatives.
- Acetylcysteine a substitute for glutathione may be effective.