Alpha-chloralose poisoning in cats in three Nordic countries-the importance of secondary poisoning

被引:1
|
作者
Windahl, Ulrika [1 ]
Tevell Aberg, Annica [1 ,2 ]
Kryuchkov, Fedor [3 ]
Lundgren, Sandra [4 ]
Tegner, Cecilia [4 ]
Dreimanis, Kristoffer [4 ]
Koivisto, Sanna [5 ]
Simola, Outi [6 ]
Sandvik, Morten [3 ]
Bernhoft, Aksel [3 ]
机构
[1] Swedish Natl Vet Inst SVA, S-75189 Uppsala, Sweden
[2] Uppsala Univ, Analyt Pharmaceut Chem, Dept Med Chem, POB 574, S-75123 Uppsala, Sweden
[3] Norwegian Vet Inst, Toxinol Res Grp, POB 64, NO-1431 As, Norway
[4] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Univ Anim Hosp, S-75007 Uppsala, Sweden
[5] Finnish Safety & Chem Agcy, POB 66, Helsinki 00521, Finland
[6] Finnish Food Author, POB 200, Helsinki 00027, Finland
关键词
Alpha-chloralose; Chloralose; Poisoning; Toxicosis; Cat; Feline; Secondary; Mice; Metabolism; PHARMACOLOGY; ANESTHESIA; CANINE;
D O I
10.1186/s12917-022-03370-w
中图分类号
S85 [动物医学(兽医学)];
学科分类号
0906 ;
摘要
Background Alpha-chloralose (AC) is a compound known to be toxic to various animal species and humans. In 2018 and 2019 an increase in suspected cases of AC poisoning in cats related to the use of AC as a rodenticide was reported to national veterinary and chemical authorities in Finland, Norway and Sweden by veterinarians working in clinical practices in respective country. The aims of this study were to prospectively investigate AC poisoning in cats, including possible secondary poisoning by consuming poisoned mice, and to study metabolism and excretion of AC in cats through analysis of feline urine. Methods Data on signalment, history and clinical findings were prospectively collected in Finland, Norway and Sweden from July 2020 until March of 2021 using a questionnaire which the attending veterinarian completed and submitted together with a serum sample collected from suspected feline cases of AC-poisoning. The diagnosis was confirmed by quantification of AC in serum samples. Content of AC was studied in four feline urine samples, including screening for AC metabolites by UHPLC-HRMS/MS. Bait intake and amount of AC consumed by mice was observed in wild mice during an extermination of a rodent infestation. Results In total, 59 of 70 collected questionnaires and accompanying serum samples were included, with 127 to 70 100 ng/mL AC detected in the serum. Several tentative AC-metabolites were detected in the analysed feline urine samples, including dechlorinated and oxidated AC, several sulfate conjugates, and one glucuronic acid conjugate of AC. The calculated amount of AC ingested by each mouse was 33 to 106 mg with a mean of 61 mg. Conclusions Clinical recognition of symptoms of AC poisoning in otherwise healthy cats roaming free outdoors and known to be rodent hunters strongly correlated with confirmation of the diagnosis through toxicological analyses of serum samples. The collected feline exposure data regarding AC show together with the calculation of the intake of bait and subsequent AC concentrations in mice that secondary poisoning from ingestion of mice is possible. The results of the screening for AC metabolites in feline urine confirm that cats excrete AC both unchanged and metabolized through dechlorination, oxidation, glucuronidation and sulfatation pathways.
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页数:13
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