“…Sorghum, an important feed for ruminants around the world and widely grown in Asia and Africa, also contains a cyanogenic glycoside, dhurrin, which has been shown to be rapidly hydrolyzed by the microbiota in the rumen of ruminants to release toxic HCN leading to animal toxicity. Investigations have shown that HCN content in fresh reclaimed sorghum is greater than 801 mg/kg, which is greater than the safety threshold of 200 mg/kg. , In 2022, there were cases of cattle dying after feeding hay containing sorghum on many farms in northwestern Italy, and the pathological results clearly indicated cyanide poisoning . This suggests that reducing the HCN content to below the safe threshold when handling feed can solve this problem.…”