NADIS disease bulletins are
written specifically for farmers, to increase awareness of prevalent conditions
and promote disease prevention and control, in order to benefit animal health
and welfare.
Farmers are advised to
discuss their individual farm circumstances with their veterinary surgeon.
Copper Poisoning in Sheep
Neil Sargison BA
VetMB DSHP FRCVS
There were several NADIS reports of copper poisoning in sheep during the
late summer. Some outbreaks were seen in
housed pet lambs, while others were seen in pedigree Bluefaced Leicester and
Texel ram lambs and shearlings which were being fed substantial amounts of
concentrates.
Copper is one of the most frequently diagnosed inorganic poisonings of
domestic ruminants. Two distinct
syndromes are recognised: chronic copper toxicity which is commonly reported
following long-term liver storage of dietary copper and acute copper toxicity
which is occasionally reported following inaccurate administration of copper
injections.
CHRONIC COPPER POISONING
Chronic copper poisoning occurs after the sheep’s liver capacity for
copper storage has been exceeded. This
results in sudden release of copper into the circulation, causing liver damage,
destruction of red blood cells and jaundice.
There is variation in breed susceptibility to copper toxicity related to
ability to absorb dietary copper. North
Ronaldsay, Texel, Suffolk and several continental short-wool breeds of sheep
are relatively susceptible, when compared with, for example, Cheviots and
Scottish Blackfaces. Growing lambs are
more susceptible than adult ewes.
Clinical signs
The clinical signs associated with chronic copper poisoning are sudden
in onset and affected animals become increasingly weak. Some sheep may spend time wandering aimlessly
or head-pressing. As the disease
progresses, jaundice develops and breathing becomes shallow and rapid due in
part to the development of anaemia.
URINE OFTEN APPEARS BLACK DUE TO RED BLOOD
CELL BREAKDOWN
JAUNDICE OF THE GUMS
JAUNDICE OF THE CONJUNCTIVAE AND THIRD EYELID
JAUNDICE OF THE SCLERA OF THE EYE
MOST ANIMALS DIE FOLLOWING A SHORT PERIOD OF RECUMBENCY. NOTE YELLOW COLOURED SKIN
The diagnosis of copper poisoning is based
on the housing and feeding history, clinical signs and post-mortem findings of
a pale tan to bronze-coloured liver and dark red or black kidneys. The diagnosis can be confirmed by laboratory
identification of high kidney copper concentrations.
BRONZE COLOURED LIVER
‘GUN METAL’ APPEARANCE OF THE KIDNEYS
Management of outbreaks of chronic copper poisoning
The treatment response to supportive therapy in animals showing clinical
signs is poor. Resources should be
directed towards identification of the underlying causes of the problem and the
prevention of clinical disease in the remaining at-risk animals. This can be achieved by a programme of oral
dosing or subcutaneous injection of ammonium tetrathiomolybdate to effectively
‘strip’ copper from the liver, although in recent months this has become
prohibitively expensive other than for very valuable animals. Copper antagonists such as molybdenum or
sulphur can be added to the ration to prevent further liver accumulation of
copper. Your vet can provide more
precise information about the management of copper poisoning in sheep.
Prevention of copper poisoning
Poisoning results from a combination of efficient absorption and high
dietary availability of copper. Prevention depends on avoiding the feeding of copper-rich diets to
susceptible animals. Sheep breed, age
(young animals absorb copper very efficiently) and the presence of dietary
copper antagonists such as iron, sulphur and molybdenum all influence the
efficiency of absorption. The
availability of dietary copper varies between different feeds. Feeds with high concentrations of available
copper include -
-
Pasture,
silage and root crops grown on ground to which large quantities of pig or
poultry manure has been applied.
-
Distillery
by-product feeds such as distiller’s dark grains produced from copper
stills. Concentrate feeds containing
palm oil or molassed sugarbeet pulp. (Whole grain cereals are relatively poor sources of copper.)
-
Other
potential sources of copper include; access to cattle minerals; copper sulphate
foot baths; and fungicide-treated timber.
In the highly susceptible North Ronaldsay breed of sheep, or in
intensively-managed housed sheep, poisoning can result from prolonged feeding
of diets with relatively low copper concentrations. Housed sheep should, therefore, not receive
any form of copper supplementation before or during housing.
ACUTE COPPER POISONING
Acute copper poisoning occurs sporadically, usually following gross over
dosage of injectable copper preparations used for prevention of deficiency
syndromes. Stressful management or
concurrent administration of other remedies may influence the animal’s ability
to remove copper from the circulation. Clinical signs are sudden in onset and non-specific and include
depression, rapid heart and respiratory rates and subnormal rectal temperature. Blue/green-coloured diarrhoea is frequently
present. Collapse and death usually
follow within 24 hours.
Copyright © NADIS 2006 www.nadis.org.uk
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