Characterization of an Epizootic of Pulmonary Edema in Swine Associated with Fumonisin in Corn Screenings

Abstract
In 1989, corn screenings were associated with acute interstitial pulmonary edema, hydrothorax, and death in swine. Attack rate was 5–50%, case fatality rate was 50–90%, and clinical course was 1–2 days. Screenings from farms with pigs affected with pulmonary edema contained 20–330 μg fumonisin B1 per gram. Screenings containing 92 μg fumonisin B1 per gram fed to weanling pigs caused pulmonary edema and death. Sterilized corn inoculated with Fusarium moniliforme and diluted 1:1 with clean corn contained fumonisin B, (17 μg/g) and caused acute pulmonary edema when fed for 5 days. Survivors developed subacute hepatotoxicosis with individual hepatocellular necrosis, hepatomegalocytosis, and increased numbers of mitotic figures. Similar liver lesions occurred in pigs given fumonisin B1 intravenously at 0.8 mg/kg body weight for 14 days.