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Pharmacologic effects and detection methods of methylated analogs of fentanyl in horses.
1989
Weckman T.J. | Tai C.L. | Woods W.E. | Tai H.H. | Blake J.W. | Tobin T.
Pharmacologic effects of alpha-methylfentanyl and 3-methylfentanyl, analogs of fentanyl, were investigated in mares. The ability of an 125I-labeled fentanyl radioimmunoassay (125I-RIA) to detect these methylated fentanyl analogs in individual and pooled urine samples from horses was evaluated. Also, the ability of 7 fentanyl antibodies to react with fentanyl and fentanyl derivatives (sufentanil, alfentanil, and carfentanil) was investigated. Mares were studied in a locomotor test to determine the amount of stimulation methylated fentanyl analogs might induce. Two mares each were given alpha-methylfentanyl at 1, 2, 4, 8, or 13 microgram/kg of body weight, IV, or 3-methylfentanyl at 0.4, 0.7, or 1 microgram/kg IV. The cross-reactivity of sufentanil, alfentanil, carfentanil, alpha-methylfentanyl, and 3-methylfentanyl with 7 fentanyl antibodies was studied, using the 125I-RIA. All fentanyl analogs, with the exception of alfentanil, cross-reacted well with a C1 antibody raised to fentanyl. Less satisfactory cross-reactivity was determined with 6 other antibodies raised to fentanyl derivatives. When the C1 antibody was combined with an iodinated analog to fentanyl, good detectability of alpha-methylfentanyl and 3-methylfentanyl, in terms of fentanyl equivalents, was obtained from urine samples of dosed mares. The ability of the 125I-RIA to detect methylated fentanyl analogs in forensic urine samples pooled in groups of up to 20 samples was evaluated. When these methylated analogs were administered to mares in doses that induced measurable locomotor stimulation, the analog's presence was readily detected in individual or pooled samples.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effect of probenecid administration on cephapirin pharmacokinetics and concentrations in mares.
1989
Juzwiak J.S. | Brown M.P. | Gronwall R. | Houston A.E.
Pharmacokinectic properties of theophylline given intravenously and orally to ruminating calves.
1989
Langston V.C. | Koritz G.D. | Davis L.E. | Neff Davis C.
The disposition of theophylline in healthy ruminating calves was best described by a first-order 2-compartment open pharamacokinetic model. The drug had a mean elimination half-life of 6.4 hours and a mean distribution half-life of 22 minutes. Total body clearance averaged 91 ml/kg/h. The mean values for the pharmacokinetic volume of the central compartment, pharmacokinetic volume of distribution during the terminal phase, and volume of distribution at steady state were 0.502, 0.870, and 0.815 L/kg, respectively. Theophylline was readily absorbed after oral administration to the ruminating calf, with a mean fraction of 0.93 absorbed. The plasma concentrations after oral dosing peaked in approximately 5 to 6 hours, with a mean absorption half-life of 3.7 hours. A flip-flop model (rate constant of input is much smaller than the rate constant of output) of drug absorption was not found because the elimination process roughly paralleled that of the study concerning IV administration. In a multiple-dose trial that used a dosage regimen based on single-dose pharmacokinetic values, clinically normal calves responded as predicted. However, diseased calves had higher than expected plasma concentrations after being given multiple oral doses of theophylline at 28 mg/kg once daily. Overt signs of toxicosis were not seen, but this aspect of the drug was not formally investigated. Theophylline can be used as an ancillary therapeutic agent to treat bovine respiratory disease, but not without risk. The suggested oral dose of theophylline at 28 mg/kg of body weight once daily should be tailored to each case. Twice daily oral dosing at 20 mg/kg should reduce the plasma peak:trough ratio and provide plasma concentrations more cnsistently within the human therapeutic range of 10 to 20 micrograms/ml. Even then, therapeutic drug monitoring should be done.
Show more [+] Less [-]Pharmacokinetics of oxytetracycline in the turkey: evaluation of biliary and urinary excretion.
1989
Dyer D.C.
Oxytetracycline (OTC) pharmacokinetic values in plasma and bile were ascertained after IV administration of the drug. At 6 hours after administration of 1 mg of OTC/kg of body weight, 2.15% of the dose was found in the bile and 37.6% was found in the urine. At 2 hours after administration, the peak bile-to-plasma OTC concentration ratio was 60:1. Bioavailability of OTC was 47.6% when it was administered orally to fasted turkeys and was 9.4% when administered to fed turkeys.
Show more [+] Less [-]In vitro susceptibility of feline herpesvirus-1 to vidarabine, idoxuridine, trifluridine, acyclovir, or bromovinyldeoxyuridine
1989
Nasisse, M.P. | Guy, J.S. | Davidson, M.G. | Sussman, W. | Clercq, E. de
In vitro activities of 9-([2-hydroxyethoxy] methyl) guanine (acyclovir), (E)-5-(2-bromovinyl)-2'deoxyuridine, 9-beta-D-arabinofuranosyladenine (vidarabine), 5-iodo-2'-deoxyuridine (idoxuridine), and 5-trifluoromethyl-2'-deoxyuridine (trifluridine) were studied against 6 strains of feline herpesvirus-1. A significant difference was not detected among viral strains in their susceptibility to these compounds (P = 0.442). The relative potency of these compounds was trifluridine greater than greater than idoxuridine greater than virdarabine greater than bromovinyldeoxyuridine greater than greater than acyclovir. Concentrations of trifluridine and idoxuridine (0.67 and 6.8 micromole, respectively) required to reduce plaque numbers by 50%, compared with that of controls, were significantly lower (P less than 0.001) than were those of other compounds.
Show more [+] Less [-]Influence of isoprinosine on lymphocyte function in virus-infected feeder pigs
1989
Flaming, K.P. | Blecha, F. | Fedorka-Cray, P.J. | Anderson, G.A.
Pseudorabies is a porcine herpesvirus of major importance in the swine industry. Isoprinosine is an immunomodulating drug that has been shown to be beneficial in treating herpesvirus infections. Twenty-four 7-week-old pigs were allotted within litters to 1 of 4 groups: control, isoprinosine (ISO), pseudorabies virus (PRV), or isoprinosine and pseudorabies virus (ISO-PRV). Isoprinosine was administered daily for 16 days to the ISO and ISO-PRV groups (75 mg/kg of body weight/day, PO). Immunity in pigs in the PRV and ISO-PRV groups was challenged with pseudorabies virus (10(5) TCID50 units) on day 4. Rectal temperatures and viral excretion were monitored daily; total and differential leukocyte counts, lymphocyte response to mitogens, and interleukin-2 production were monitored every 4 days. Pigs challenge-inoculated with pseudorabies virus became ill, with the ISO-PRV group most severely affected. Rectal temperatures were high (P less than 0.05) in virally challenged pigs on days 5 to 12 and 14 to 16; isoprinosine did not alter this effect. Pseudorabies virus-infected pigs had leukocytosis (P less than 0.05) on days 12 and 16, primarily caused by neutrophilia. Concanavalin A-stimulated lymphocyte proliferation was decreased (P less than 0.06) in both PRV and ISO-PRV groups on day 12, compared with control pigs, but only in the PRV group on day 16. Pokeweed mitogen-stimulated lymphocyte proliferation was decreased (P less than 0.02) in ISO-PRV pigs on day 8 of the experiment. Interleukin-2 concentrations, pooled over all sampling days, were decreased (P less than 0.03) in pseudorabies virus-infected pigs. Viral excretion was not altered by isoprinosine treatment. These data suggest that pseudorabies virus infection decreased lymphocyte proliferative responses and interleukin-2 prodcution in pigs, and that isoprinosine did not mitigate these effects.
Show more [+] Less [-]Effects of testosterone on the prevention of T-2 toxin-induced adrenocortical necrosis in mice
1989
Thurman, J.D. | Creasia, D.A. | Trotter, R.W.
To evaluate the effect of exogenous testosterone on the development of T-2 toxin-induced necrosis of adrenal glands, mice were allotted to 3 treatment groups. Each treatment group contained castrated male, and castrated and sexually intact female mice. Each mouse in group 1 was given 0.16 mg testosterone propionate at 48-hour intervals for a total of 12 infections, group-2 mice were given similar injections of only the vehicle, and group-3 mice were given no treatment. Twenty-four hours after the last injection, the mice in all 3 groups were exposed for 10 minutes to an aerosol of T-2 toxin. All mice alive at 24 hours after exposure were euthanatized and the adrenal glands and thymuses were examined histologically. Necrosis of the adrenal cortex was not found in any of the mice given preexposure treatment with exogenous testosterone, whereas all mice given vehicle only or no treatment had T-2 toxin-induced necrosis of the inner portion of the adrenal cortex. Lymphocytolysis in the cortex of the thymus confirmed that each mouse of all 3 treatment groups had experienced systemic mycotoxicosis. The uniform severity of the lesion in all mice suggests that the thymus was not protected by exogenous testosterone administration or by the castration status of the mice. We propose that T-2 toxin-induced adrenal necrosis in mice is prevented by the presence of testosterone.
Show more [+] Less [-]Tropism of canine neutrophils to xanthine oxidase
1989
Gruber, D.F. | Farese, A.M.
Quantitative evaluation of neutrophil chemotaxis was performed on cells obtained by hypotonic-lysis techniques from heparinized blood samples from clinically normal dogs. The techniques resulted in neutrophil recovery rates between 60 and 80%. Chemotaxis comparisons were based on cellular migration in microchambers equipped with polycarbonate membranes with 5-micrometer pores. Chemo-attractant comparisons were based on neutrophil migration to medium, normal canine plasma, zymosan-activated plasma, and xanthine oxidase. Cellular migration to zymosan-activated plasma in buffer (1:100 dilution) was significantly (P less than 0.001) enhanced over random baseline medium migration. Neutrophil migrations to normal canine plasma and xanthine oxidase were quantitatively less than to zymosan-activated plasma, but were equivalent to each other and significantly greater than for random migration. Migration to xanthine oxidase was maximal at concentrations near 1 U/ml within 30 minutes.
Show more [+] Less [-]Direct effects of Pasteurella haemolytica lipopolysaccharide on bovine pulmonary endothelial cells in vitro
1989
Paulsen, D.B. | Mosier, D.A. | Clinkenbeard, K.D. | Confer, A.W.
Bovine pulmonary artery cells in cell culture were exposed to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) purified from Pasteurella haemolytica serotype A1. This resulted in severe membrane damage, which caused a time- and dose-dependent release of lactate dehydrogenase that was first detected 4 hours after exposure and reached a maximal mean release of 67% after 24 hours of exposure to 1 microgram of LPS/ml. Mean release of 51chromium followed by a similar pattern and reached a maximum of 61% following 24 hours of exposure to 10 micrograms of LPS/ml. Morphologically, endothelial cells responded to LPS by marked cell membrane retraction, the formation of numerous cytoplasmic blebs, and ruffling of the cell membrane. Subsequently, the cells became round and detached. Cell detachment reached a mean of 95% following 8 hours of exposure to 1 microgram of LPS/ml. These studies demonstrated that P haemolytica LPS is capable of causing direct damage to bovine pulmonary arterial endothelial cells, which may be important in the pathogenesis of bovine pneumonic pasteurellosis.
Show more [+] Less [-]Isolation and trypsin-enhanced propagation of turkey enteric (bluecomb) coronaviruses in a continuous human rectal adenocarcinoma cell line
1989
Dea, S. | Garzon, S. | Tijssen, P.
Turkey enteric coronavirus (TCV) from intestinal contents of diarrheal poults was isolated and serially propagated in HRT-18 cells, an established cell line derived from a human rectal adenocarcinoma. In these cells, TCV induced cytopathic changes, including polykaryocytosis, which depended on trypsin in the medium and incubation at 41 C. Viral antigens could be demonstrated in the cytoplasm by immunofluorescence, and extracellular virus was detected by an ELISA and negative electron microscopy. The cell-free virus had characteristics of TCV: shape, surface projections, buoyant density of 1.18 to 1.20 g/ml in sucrose, and hemagglutination of rat RBC. The one-step growth curve was complete by postinoculation hours 14 to 16, and maximal titers reached 9 to 9.5 log10 TCID50/ml during 5 passages, after which the titer remained stable. Electron microscopic examination of infected cell monolayers revealed budding of typical coronavirus particles through intracytoplasmic membranes and accumulation of complete virus in cytoplasmic vesicles. Late in the infection, aggregated progeny vial particles were detected near the outer surface of infected cells. One-day-old turkey poults inoculated orally with tissue culture-adapted TCV isolates developed mild to severe diarrhea.
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