Nigropallidal encephalomalacia

Nigropallidal encephalomalacia or Chewing disease is a neurological condition that affects horses. Affected animals are unable to swallow easily and the food remains in the mouth where it is persistently chewed. The principal cause is a diet high in Centaurea solstitialis or Yellow star-thistle or Creeping Knapweed which leads to the development over months of Parkinson's disease like symptoms. [1]. The development of the disease typically occurs when Yellow Star-thistle is more than 50% of the horse's diet over a protracted period[2]. The causative agent for Creeping Knapweed is believed to be repin. a Sesquiterpene lactone. [3]


Occurrence

The disease appears to be restricted to areas where the causative plant species have become invasive and may represent the only food available. Most evidence from published data relates to the western US and to Victoria, Australia.

gollark: I mean, you can but it's much harder because you need to physically be elsewhere.
gollark: With companies or people or whatever, you can usually just go to a different one. You *can't* do that for governments.
gollark: They do not, at least, have legally binding power and the whole "monopoly on violence" thing going on.
gollark: If it's really easy to convert some new opinion into binding law, then people will do it lots and you get badness.
gollark: And I don't trust the government much either, because they tend to grow excessively and/or do stupid/powergrabby things.

References

  1. H. T. Chang; W. K. Rumbeiha; J. S. Patterson; B. Puschner; A. P. Knight (28 April 2011). "Toxic Equine Parkinsonism: An Immunohistochemical Study of 10 Horses With Nigropallidal Encephalomalacia". Vetinary Pathology. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  2. "Yellow Starthistle". ASPCA. Retrieved 8 July 2020.
  3. Robles, M.; Wang, N.; Kim, R.; Choi, B.H. (1997). "Cytotoxic effects of repin, a principal sesquiterpene lactone of russian knapweed". Journal of Neuroscience Research. 47 (1): 90–7. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-4547(19970101)47:1<90::AID-JNR10>3.0.CO;2-E. PMID 8981242.
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