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Elemental sulfur toxicosis in a flock of sheep
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1996
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Animal PhysiologyAnimal ScienceMedicinePhysiologyElemental Sulfur ToxicosisVeterinary SciencePoisoningEducationToxicologyEcotoxicologyElemental SulfurSulfur ToxicosisToxicological AspectExperimental ToxicologyPharmacologyHydrogen SulfideToxicological MechanismOxidative Stress
Two thousand Panama X Rambouillet ewes from a flock of 2,200 developed signs of acute toxicosis after being moved to a field that had been sprayed 16 hours earlier with elemental sulfur. Acute signs were lethargy, abdominal discomfort, and prostration. Two hundred six (10%) of the affected ewes died within 24 hours. Polioencephalomalacia that was unresponsive to thiamine treatment developed in another 40 (2%) of the ewes; 28 (70%) of the ewes with polioencephalomalacia recovered. Sulfur is converted to hydrogen sulfide in the rumen. Signs of sulfur toxicosis are a result of absorption of hydrogen sulfide and interaction with the cytochrome system and hemoglobin. Sulfide is detoxified in the RBC and by the liver.