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Locoweed (also crazyweed and loco) is a common name in North America for any plant that produces swainsonine, an alkaloid harmful to livestock. Worldwide, swainsonine is produced by a small number of species , most of them in three genera of the flowering plant family Fabaceae : Oxytropis and Astragalus in North America , [ 1 ] and Swainsona in ...
Locoweed poisoning is "the most widespread poisonous plant problem in the western United States." [ 3 ] Locoweeds cause locoism , a disease state resulting from chronic neurological damage. Symptoms of locoism include depression , blindness , loss of coordination, emaciation , tremors, paralysis , constipation , deterioration of the coat ...
Oxytropis lambertii commonly known as purple locoweed, [3] Colorado locoweed, [4] Lambert's crazy weed, [5] or Lambert’s Locoweed [6] is a species of flowering plant in the legume family. Distribution
Some astragalus species can be toxic, such as those found in the United States containing the neurotoxin swainsonine, which causes "locoweed" poisoning in animals. [11] Some astragalus species may contain high levels of selenium , possibly causing toxicity.
This plant may look like wildflowers, but it can cause painful rash and blistering. A video of an Iowa resident with the rash explains why.
Oxytropis splendens, commonly known as showy locoweed, is a flowering perennial in the legume family endemic to the east slope of the Rocky Mountains. [3] Growing in Canada , Alaska , several Great Plains states , and parts of the Mountain West , O. splendens grows well in harsh alpine ecosystems, allowing it to quickly colonize gravel and coal ...
Caustic ingestion occurs when someone accidentally or deliberately ingests a caustic or corrosive substance.Depending on the nature of the substance, the duration of exposure and other factors it can lead to varying degrees of damage to the oral mucosa, the esophagus, and the lining of the stomach.
Children under 6 are more likely to be exposed, but a new study finds that fatal poisonings from laundry detergent pods in a recent three-year period were all in adults.