خيارات البحث
النتائج 1 - 2 من 2
Effect of treatment with erythromycin and rifampin during the acute stages of experimentally induced equine ehrlichial colitis in ponies
1992
Palmer, J.E. | Benson, C.E.
Sixteen healthy ponies were inoculated IV with Ehrlichia risticii-infected P388D1 mouse monocytes. Of the 16 ponies, 15 developed clinical signs of equine ehrlichial colitis. Twenty-four hours after onset of fever (rectal temperature > 38.8 degrees C), 7 ponies were treated with 25 mg of erythromycin stearate/kg of body weight and 10 mg of rifampin/kg, given orally every 12 hours for 5 days. The remaining 8 ill ponies served as nontreated controls. All ponies were observed for progression of clinical signs typical of equine ehrlichial colitis. Within 12 hours of initiation of treatment, 4 of the 7 treated ponies had rectal temperature < 38.4 C and, within 24 hours, 6 of the 7 ponies had rectal temperature < 38.3C. In contrast, all control ponies had rectal temperature > 39.2 C at 24 hours (P < 0.05). Of the 7 treated ponies, 4 no longer had signs of mental depression after the second day of treatment, and only 1 of the 7 ponies had mild signs of depression after the third day of treatment. In contrast, control ponies had high mental depression score during the observation period (P < 0.05). Feed intake improved in ponies of the treatment group, with feed intake of 4 of the 7 ponies returning to normal; the other 3 ponies were only mildly anorectic by the second day of treatment. Control ponies progressively decreased their feed intake during the observation period (P < 0.05). One control pony and 2 treated ponies developed diarrhea before the treatment/observation period began. Only 1 treated pony developed diarrhea after treatment began. Of the 8 control ponies, 7 developed diarrhea. Profound decrease in borborygmal sounds with silent periods lasting longer than 3 minutes was observed in 7 of the 8 control ponies. Only 1 of the 7 treated ponies had such profound decrease in borborygmi (P < 0.05). The decrease in borborygmal sounds progressed in the control ponies during the observation period. None of the treated ponies continued to have decreased borborygmi after treatment day 2 (P < 0.05). Of the 8 control ponies, 2 were euthanatized; all treated ponies survived. In survivors, signs lasted 8 to 17 (mean, 10) days in control ponies but only 1 to 5 (mean, 2.9) days in treated ponies.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]Effect of treatment with oxytetracycline during the acute stages of experimentally induced equine ehrlichial colitis in ponies
1992
Palmer, J.E. | Benson, C.E. | Whitlock, R.H.
Eighteen ponies were inoculated IV with Ehrlichia risticii-infected P388D1 mouse monocyte cells. Twenty-four hours after onset of fever (rectal temperature > 38.8 C), 9 ponies were treated with oxytetracycline (6.6 mg/kg of body weight, IV, q 24 h) for 5 days. The remaining 9 ponies served as infected nontreated controls. Mean scores of the following variables were not significantly different between groups on the day treatment was begun: rectal temperature, diarrhea, borborygmal sounds, feed intake, mental attitude, and evidence of a hyperresonant area in the abdomen. All ponies were observed for progression of clinical signs typical of ehrlichial colitis. Within 12 hours of initiation of treatment, only 1 treated pony had a rectal temperature > 38.8 C and most rectal temperatures were < 38.3 C. In contrast, only 2 control ponies had rectal temperatures < 38.8 C (mean rectal temperature values were significantly, P = 0.01, different between groups). In the treatment group, 4 ponies had no signs of depression after the first day of treatment, and only 1 had signs of depression after the second day of treatment (mean scores between groups were significantly different, P = 0.01). Feed intake remained normal in 4 treated ponies and improved in 4 of the remaining 5 after treatment began. Most of the control ponies had a progressive decrease in their feed intake during the observation period (mean scores between groups were significantly, P = 0.01, different). Three ponies in the control group and 2 ponies in the treatment group developed diarrhea before the treatment observation period began. Of the remaining 6 control ponies, 4 developed diarrhea after the treatment observation period began. None of the ponies in the treatment group developed diarrhea after treatment began. A profound decrease in borborygmal sounds, with silent periods lasting longer than 3 minutes, developed in 7 control ponies. Only 2 treatment ponies had borborygmi decreased to this level (mean scores between groups were significantly, P = 0.01, different). Three of 9 control group ponies developed severe disease and were euthanatized. All treatment-group ponies survived. In surviving ponies, clinical signs lasted 8 to 16 days (mean, 11.5) in the control group, but lasted only 1 to 7 days (mean, 4.5) in the treatment group (P = 0.01). Ponies from the treatment group did not develop clinical signs when reinoculated with Ehrlichia risticii at 4 and 8 months after original inoculation.
اظهر المزيد [+] اقل [-]