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  • Mushroom toxicosis in dogs in general practice causing gastroenteritis, ptyalism and elevated serum lipase activity.

Mushroom toxicosis in dogs in general practice causing gastroenteritis, ptyalism and elevated serum lipase activity.

The Journal of small animal practice (2013-02-13)
J Hall, L Barton
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Mushroom toxicosis is rarely diagnosed in dogs and is poorly reported in the veterinary literature. This report suggests that mushroom toxicosis is a potentially under-diagnosed condition in first opinion practice in the UK. Nine dogs with clinical signs consistent with mushroom toxicosis were identified from the records of an out-of-hours emergency service between August 2010 and January 2011. Four dogs were later excluded because of clinical inconsistencies. Clinical signs included acute profuse ptyalism (5/5), diarrhoea (5/5), vomiting (4/5), hypovolaemia (4/5), stuporous (3/5) or obtunded mentation (1/5), miosis (2/5) and hypothermia (2/5). Serum lipase activity was elevated in 4/4 dogs; canine-specific pancreatic lipase was elevated in the remaining dog. Four dogs recovered with aggressive intravenous fluid therapy, analgesia and supportive care; the remaining dog was euthanased due to severe clinical signs and financial constraints. Mushroom toxicosis is an important differential diagnosis for acute gastroenteritis and one possible cause of some cases of "Seasonal Canine Illness". Affected dogs may demonstrate elevated pancreatic enzymes and mushroom toxicosis should be considered in cases of elevated lipase or abnormal semi-quantitative canine-specific pancreatic lipase activities.

MATERIALIEN
Produktnummer
Marke
Produktbeschreibung

Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase aus Candida rugosa, Type VII, ≥700 unit/mg solid
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase aus Schweinepankreas, Type II, ≥125 units/mg protein (using olive oil (30 min incubation)), 30-90 units/mg protein (using triacetin)
Sigma-Aldrich
Lipase-Acrylharz aus Candida antarctica, ≥5,000 U/g, recombinant, expressed in Aspergillus niger
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Lipase aus Schweinepankreas, Type VI-S, ≥20,000 units/mg protein, lyophilized powder
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Lipase B Candida antarctica, rekombinant aus Aspergillus oryzae, powder, beige, ~9 U/mg
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Lipase aus Aspergillus niger, powder (fine), ~200 U/g
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Lipase aus Aspergillus oryzae, solution, ≥100,000 U/g, white, beige
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Lipase aus Candida rugosa, lyophilized powder, ≥40,000 units/mg protein
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Lipase, immobilisiert aus Candida antarctica, beads, slightly brown, >2 U/mg
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Lipase aus Candida sp., recombinant, expressed in Aspergillus niger
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Lipase aus Pseudomonas cepacia, powder, light beige, ≥30 U/mg
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Lipase aus Rhizomucor miehei, ≥20,000 U/g
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Lipase aus Weizenkeimen, Type I, lyophilized powder, 5-15 units/mg solid
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Lipase aus Rhizopus oryzae, powder (fine), ~10 U/mg
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Lipase aus Aspergillus oryzae, lyophilized, powder, white, ~50 U/mg
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Lipase aus Pseudomonas sp., Type XIII, lyophilized powder, ≥15 units/mg solid
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Lipase aus Candida rugosa, lyophilized, powder (fine), 15-25 U/mg
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Lipase aus Candida rugosa, powder, yellow-brown, ≥2 U/mg
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Lipase aus Mucor miehei, lyophilized powder, ≥4,000 units/mg solid (using olive oil)
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Lipase aus Mucor miehei, powder, slightly brown, ~1 U/mg
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Lipase aus Rhizopus niveus, powder (fine), ≥1.5 U/mg
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Lipase aus Mucor javanicus, lyophilized powder, ≥300 units/mg solid (using olive oil)
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Lipase A Candida antarctica, rekombinant aus Aspergillus oryzae, powder, beige, ~2 U/mg