A NEUROCHEMICAL STUDY OF FIELD CASES OF THE DELAYED SPINAL FORM OF SWAYBACK (ENZOOTICATAXIA) IN LAMBS

1974 
— Spinal cords of 5-8 week-old lambs affected with the delayed or spinal form of swayback were deficient in myelin lipid components such as cholesterol, cerebrosides and phospholipids and contained less water than cords obtained from clinically and histologically unaffected lambs. The rate of synthesis in vitro of cerebrosides containing hydroxy fatty acids was reduced but the fatty acid composition of this and of the “non-hydroxy cerebroside’ fractions were quite normal. Isolated myelin was deficient in copper compared with healthy controls and there was a deficiency in one of its basic protein constituents. This suggested an inherent instability of myelin in affected lambs while the presence of some 4 per cent of cholesterol in the esterified form (none normally present) was indicative of degenerative changes. Five out of eight clinically unaffected lambs obtained from the same flocks proved to be sub-clinical cases when the spinal cord was examined histologically and showed some of the neurochemical abnormalities of the overt clinical disease. When affected lambs were kept at the laboratory until 16 weeks old and fed a copper sufficient diet some of the spinal lesions showed signs of regression and there were fewer neurochemical abnormalities. In particular, cholesterol esters could not be detected in the spinal cord lipids.
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