Principales mycotoxicosis en cerdos

Autores/as

  • Pollyana Cristina Maggio de Castro Souto
  • Laurinda Augusto
  • Mayra Carraro Di Gregorio
  • Carlos Augusto Fernandes de Oliveira

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35172/rvz.2017.v24.286

Palabras clave:

micotoxinas, toxicidad, cerdos

Resumen

Varias micotoxinas ampliamente distribuidas en la naturaleza tienen acentuadas propiedades
tóxicas y pueden contaminar los cultivos de maíz para el consumo humano y animal. La
aflatoxina y las fusariotoxinas (principalmente zearalenona y fumonisinas) son las que más
comúnmente causan pérdidas en la cría de cerdos. La producción de fusariotoxinas ocurre
principalmente antes de la cosecha, pero igual de aflatoxina, también puede ocurrir después
de la cosecha si no se trata y se seca correctamente. Los efectos relacionados con la ingestión
de estos compuestos dependen de factores relacionados con la toxina (estructura química, la
dosis) y animal (especie, raza, sexo, edad, estado nutricional). Sin embargo, la posibilidad de
ocurrencia simultánea de dos o más micotoxinas, puede dar lugar a la potenciación de sus
efectos tóxicos sobre el organismo susceptible y, dependiendo del grado de intoxicación, los
síntomas provocados están representados principalmente por la baja productividad de los
animales, aumento de la susceptibilidad a las enfermedades, lo que genera grandes pérdidas
económicas. Esta revisión presenta los aspectos generales relacionados con la toxicología,
como mecanismos de acción y efectos en los cerdos, así como dados de ocurrencia de
aflatoxina, zearalenona y fumonisinas en el maíz brasileño.

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Publicado

2017-09-29

Cómo citar

1.
Maggio de Castro Souto PC, Augusto L, Carraro Di Gregorio M, Fernandes de Oliveira CA. Principales mycotoxicosis en cerdos. RVZ [Internet]. 29 de septiembre de 2017 [citado 21 de diciembre de 2024];24(3):480-94. Disponible en: https://rvz.emnuvens.com.br/rvz/article/view/286

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