Bourke C A, Carrigan M J, Dixon R J
New South Wales Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research and Veterinary Centre, Orange.
Aust Vet J. 1988 Jul;65(7):218-20. doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1988.tb14462.x.
The acute toxicity for sheep of 3 alkaloids that occur in Phalaris acquatica was examined by intravenous and oral administration. The lowest tested dose rates that produced clinically observed signs were, for 5-methoxy dimethyltryptamine, 0.1 mg/kg body weight intravenously and 40 mg/kg orally; for gramine, 10 mg/kg intravenously and 500 mg/kg orally; and for hordenine, 20 mg/kg intravenously and 800 mg/kg orally. All induced the clinical signs observed in the nervous form of phalaris toxicity, but none induced the cardiac, sudden death, syndrome.