Refinar búsqueda
Resultados 171-180 de 471
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.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]In vitro reactivity of digital arteries and veins to vasoconstrictive mediators in healthy horses and in horses with early laminitis
1989
Baxter, G.M. | Laskey, R.E. | Tackett, R.L. | Moore, J.N. | Allen, D.
The in vitro reactivity of vasoconstrictive mediators that are implicated in acute laminitis was determined in palmar and plantar digital arteries and veins obtained from healthy horses and in palmar digital vessels of horses with early laminitis (Obel grade I). To obtain baseline reactivity data, 3 experiments were conducted, using healthy horses: (1) the reactivity of palmar and plantar digital arteries and veins to angiotensin II, norephinephrine, and 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) were compared; (2) the direct effects of bacterial endotoxin on vascular reactivity were assessed; and (3) the reactivity of palmar digital arteries and veins to angiotensin II, norepinephrine, prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha), sertonin, and a thromboxane-endoperoxide analog (U46619) were determined. The vascular reactivity of these same 5 vasoconstrictors then was determined in horses with early laminitis and was compared with data from healthy (control) horses. Obel grade-I laminitis was experimentally induced in horses using carbohydrate overload. Dose responses were conducted for each agent at concentrations between 10(-8)M and 10(-4)M. The potency of a drug was defined as the mean effective concentration necessary to induce 50% of maximal contraction (EC50). There were no differences in EC50 concentrations and in maximal contractions between forelimb and hind limb arteries and veins for angiotensin II, norepinephrine, and serotonin. Incubation with endotoxin had no effect on the reactivity of arteries and veins to angiotension II, norepinephrine, and serotonin. In healthy horses, serotonin and U46619 were more potent arterial constrictors than were norepinephrine PGF2 alpha, and angiotensin II. In veins, serotonin, U46619, and angiotension II were similar in potency, and all were significantly (P less than 0.05) more potent than were norepinephrine and PGF2 alpha. Serotonin induced greater arterial constriction than did all other agents tested. There were no differences in the maximal venoconstriction induced by norepinephrine, PGF2 alpha, serotonin, and U46619. Angiotensin II induced the least amount of arterial and venous constriction. Maximal contractions were significantly (P less than 0.05) greater for veins than for arteries for all agents evaluated, except for angiotensin II. In horses with early laminitis, angiotensin II and serotonin were the most potent (smallest EC50 values) constricting agents for the arterial and venous segments and norepinephrine and PGF2 alpha were the least potent. Serotonin and norepinephrine induced significantly (P less than 0.05) greater venoconstriction than did the other agents. Angiotensin II induced the least arterial and venous contraction. For all agonists except angiotensin II, the mean EC50 values for vessels from horses with early laminitis were either similar or greater than those for vessels from control horses. The EC50 values for norepinephrine and the thromboxane analog were significantly (P less than 0.05) greater for vessels from horses with early laminitis, compared with those from control horses. The mean maximal contractions for all vasoconstrictors, except angiotensin II, were significantly (P less than 0.05) less for vessels from horses with early laminitis. Significantly greater venous-to-arterial maximal contraction ratios were found for norepinephrine and serotonin in horses with laminitis, compared with those ratios in control horses. These data suggested that the digital vasculature of horses with early laminitis was not more sensitive to the vasoconstrictor substances tested and that the vessels were significantly less repsonsive than was vasculature from the control horses. However, the venous-to-arterial contraction ratios were either the same or significantly (P less than 0.05) greater in horses with laminitis.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Cardiovascular effects of vasopressors in isoflurane-anesthetized dogs before and after hemorrhage
1989
Curtis, M.B. | Bednarski, R.M. | Majors, L.
Exogenously administered vasopressors (sympathomimetics were evaluated in isoflurane-anesthetized dogs to determine the effects of these drugs on cardiovascular function before and after hemorrhage. Six dogs were anesthetized with thiamylal sodium (20 mg/kg of body weight) and isoflurane (1.25 minimal alveolar concentration) in 100% oxygen. After instrumentation, cardiac output, systemic arterial blood pressure, heart rate (HR), left ventricular pressure, pulmonary arterial pressure, and an index of cardiac contractility (dP/dT) were measured. Stroke volume, cardiac index (CI), stroke index (SI), rate-pressure product, and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) were calculated. Epinephrine (0.1, 0.3, and 0.5 micrograms/kg/min [low, medium, and high doses, respectively]) and dobutamine (1, 5, and 10 micrograms/kg/min [low, medium, and high doses, respectively]) were infused. Methoxamine was given in a bolus of 0.22 mg/kg, IV. All measurements were taken at 2.5 minutes after infusion, and were repeated after removal of 40% of the estimated blood volume. Before hemorrhage, administration of high doses of dobutamine and medium and high doses of epinephrine were equally effective at increasing CI and SI. The dP/dT was increase to the greatest degree by administration of high doses of dobutamine. Administration of the low dose of dobutamine increased dP/dT, whereas administration of the low dose of epinephrine increased CI, HR, and SI, and decreased SVR. The HR and SVR were not increased by administration of any dose of dobutamine or of the medium and high doses of epinephrine. However, methoxamine increased SVR and decreased HR. Methoxamine decreased CI, SI, and dP/dT, but increased systemic arterial pressure to the same degree as that attributed to administration of high doses of dobutamine and epinephrine. After hemorrhage, effectiveness of the drugs in eliciting a response was unchanged, except for a decreased ability of dobutamine to increase rate-pressure product. Further, when the results of this study were compared with those of an earlier halothane study, there were no significant differences in the response of a variable to drug infusion on the basis of the anethetic. The drugs were equally effective with halothane or isoflurane anesthesia. Results inidcated that dobutamine and ephinephrine are effective short-term treatments for hypovolemia during volume resuscitation, and that they work equally well with halothane or isoflurane anesthesia.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Effect of fenoldopam on cecal blood flow and mechanical activity in horses
1989
Clark, E.S. | Moore, J.N.
Lateral cecal arterial blood flow, carotid arterial pressure, heart rate, and mechanical activity in the duodenum, right ventral colon, cecal body, and cecal apex were measured in 6 conscious healthy horses for 60 minutes during and for 120 minutes after IV infusion of 0.9% NaCl solution (control) or fenoldopam. There were no significant changes in these measurements during or after infusion of 0.9% NaCl (saline) solution. Fenoldopam, a selective dopamine- 1 receptor agonist, was administered in saline solution at dosages of 0.01, 0.05, and 0.1 ug/kg/min. Intravenous infusion of fenoldopam at 0.01 ug/kg/min significantly increased heart rate, but did not change average carotid arterial pressure or lateral cecal arterial blood flow. Intravenous infusion of fenoldopam at both 0.05 and 0.1 ug/kg/min significantly increased heart rate, significantly decreased average carotid arterial pressure, and significantly increased lateral cecal arterial blood flow. Intravenous infusion of fenoldopam at 0.01, 0.05 and 0.1 ug/kg/min did not significantly change the mechanical activity measured by the area under the strain gauge defection curve for the duodenum, right ventral colon, cecal body, or cecal apex. These results suggest that dopaminergic-1 receptors are present on the colonic vascudopaminergic-1 receptors exist on the visceral smooth muscle of the duodenum, right ventral colon, cecal body, or cecal apex of horses.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for measurement of allergen-specific IgE antibodies in canine serum
1989
Kleinbeck, M.L. | Hites, M.J. | Loker, J.L. | Halliwell, R.E. | Lee, K.W.
A micro-ELISA, using horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-canine IgE and polystyrene microtitration wells for detection of allergen-specific IgE in canine serum, was developed. Specificity of anti-canine IgE was confirmed by reversed cutaneous anaphylaxis evaluations, gel-precipitation reactions, immunoelectrophoresis, immunoaffinity chromatography, and heat inactivation. Individual allergen blanks were used to account for variable nonspecific binding among various allergens, and results were normalized using 4 reference sera. Coefficients of variation for intra-assay and interassay variability ranged from 0.77 to 5.66% and 3.15 to 9.83%, respectively. Results observed with wells coated with mixtures of various allergen extracts yielded results approximately equal to results (average) of wells containing individual components. Agreement between ELISA and skin test results ranged from 43 to 64%, depending on allergen used.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Rotavirus replication in colostrum-fed and colostrum-deprived pigs
1989
Shaw, D.P. | Morehouse, L.G. | Solorzano, R.F.
A porcine rotavirus isolate was titrated in neonatal colostrum-fed and colostrum-deprived pigs. The stock rotavirus suspension had a titer of 10 /ml and was in its fifteenth cell culture passage in MA-104 cells. Fourteen colostrum-fed pigs were orally inoculated with dilutions of the stock virus suspension ranging from undiluted to 10-5. These pigs did not develop notable clinical signs during the 7-day experimental trial and no pathologic changes were found in intestine, liver, lung, kidney, spleen, or brain. However, rotavirus was detected in feces of the colostrum-fed pigs, using virus isolation and electron microscopic techniques. Rotavirus was also isolated from lung, brain, or spleen of 4 of 12 of these pigs. Sixteen colostrum-deprived pigs were orally inoculated with dilutions of the stock virus suspension ranging from 10-1 to 10-8. Diarrhea developed in 10 of 12 pigs that were given up to the 10-6 dilution. Seven of these 12 pigs died because of the severity of diarrhea. Pigs that died of rotavirus-induced diarrhea had severe villus loss in the jejunum and ileum. Villi of the small intestine of colostrum-deprived pigs that survived the severe diarrhea were within normal limits at the end of the 7-day trial. The colostrum-deprived pigs that were inoculated with a dilution less than 10-6 and survived past 96 hours underwent seroconversion. Rotavirus was detected by virus isolation and electron microscopy in the feces of all colostrum-deprived pigs that survived beyond 18.5 hours after inoculation. Virus was isolated from lungs, brain, or spleen of 12 of 16 colostrum-deprived pigs.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Role of leukotriene B4 in the pathogenesis of Klebsiella pneumoniae-induced bovine mastitis
1989
Rose, D.M. | Giri, S.N. | Wood, S.J. | Cullor, J.S.
Mastitis was induced in 4 lactating cows by inoculation of Klebsiella pneumoniae (10(7) organisms/ml) via the teat canal. Sterile isotonic saline solution (1 ml) was instilled into designated control quarters via the teat canal. Changes in milk leukotriene B4 and C4 (LTB4, LTC4) concentrations, milk somatic cell counts, and milk bovine serum albumin concentration were monitored over a 24-hour postinoculation period. Milk LTB4 concentration before inoculation in control quarters and quarters later to be infected was 376 +/- 45 and 326 +/- 56 pg/ml of milk, respectively. A significant (P less than 0.05) increase in milk LTB4 concentration in the infected quarters was first observed at postinoculation hour 6, and milk LTB4 concentration in infected quarters generally remained significantly high through postinoculation hour 14. Thereafter, milk LTB4 concentration in infected quarters was not significantly different from the concentration in control quarters. Measurable amounts of LTC4 were not detected in the milk of either control or infected quarters. Milk bovine serum albumin concentration in the infected quarters generally was high throughout the study, as were milk somatic cell counts. The results of this study suggested that LTB4 contributes to the pathogenesis of bovine mastitis.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Transformation of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae and analysis of R factors by electroporation
1989
Lalonde, G. | Miller, J.F. | Tompkins, L.S. | O'Hanley, P.
An efficient method for DNA transfer is essential for the genetic manipulation of any organism. Such a capacity will be required for the genetic analysis of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae as a swine pathogen, as well as for its manipulation for vaccination purposes. For this reason, the use of electroporation as a means of plasmid DNA introduction into this species was examined. The multiply antibiotic-resistant strain 80-8141 of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae harbors 3 plasmids: pYG10, pYG15, and pYG12 of 5.0, 2.7, and 2.5 kb, respectively. Electroporation of A pleuropneumoniae strain 4074 with a plasmid extract of strain 80-8141 showed that pYG10 encodes chloramphenicol resistance and that pYG12 encodes ampicillin resistance. Electrical pulse conditions for efficient electroporation of strain 4074 were examined by use of pYG10 DNA isolated from a 4074 transformant. Efficiency, expressed as transformants per microgram of plasmid DNA, increased directly with pulse amplitude. However, high efficiencies were only observed in a narrow window of pulse duration (gamma = 12 to 22 ms at 6.25 kV/cm). Longer pulse durations resulted in cell death. Electroporation efficiencies increased with cell density. Yield of transformants increased directly with DNA concentration. Results indicate that electroporation can be used to efficiently transform A pleuropneumoniae and that pYG10 and pYG12 are suitable plasmid vectors for use in the genetic manipulation of this organism. Actinobacillus (Haemophilus) pleuropneumoniae is a prominent cause of respiratory infections in swine. Clinical isolates of A pleuropneumoniae have been reported to be resistant to tetracycline, triple sulfonamides, ampicillin, and streptomycin. There has been particular concern over the increasing incidence of resistance to chloramphenicol, which may be related to the extensive use of this antibiotic for treatment of swine pleuropneumonia. In 1980, 95% of the strains of A pleuropneumoniae isolated from the St-Hyacinthe region of Quebec, Canada, were found to be sensitive to chloramphenicol; whereas in 1982, only 57% of surveyed strains were still sensitive to this antibiotic. Resistance to ampicillin, streptomycin, and sulfadiazine in A pl europneumoniae strains has been shown to be plasmid-mediated. The purpose of the study reported here was to use electroporation to analyze plasmids carried by a multiply antibiotic-resistant clinical isolate of A pleuropneumoniae. Electroporation involves the use of brief high-voltage electrical discharges to induce reversible permeability in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic membranes. Using a 5.0-kb A pleuropneumoniae plasmid encoding resistance to chloramphenicol, we have optimized electroporation as a means to transform this species. Conditions permitting an efficiency of over 10(5) transformants (Tfs)/microgram of plasmid DNA are described.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Somatosensory-evoked and spinal cord-evoked potentials in response to pudendal and tibial stimulation in cats
1989
Sims, M.H. | Selcer, R.R.
Somatosensory-evoked potentials (SEP) and spinal cord-evoked potentials (SCEP) were recorded in clinically normal adult cats in response to electrical stimulation of pudendal and tibial nerves to provide normative data that can be used in a clinical evaluation of pudendal nerve function in cats after sacral or sacrococcygeal luxations or fractures. Responses to tibial nerve stimulation were included in the study as an internal control because it is usually not involved in these types of injuries and because its SEP and SCEP are easily recorded. Evoked potentials were characterized by the latencies (ms) of positive (P or p) and negative (N or n) peaks. The SEP resulting from percutaneous pudendal nerve stimulation consisted of a prominent P-N-P potential in the 30- to 80-ms range. The pudendal SCEP was not successfully recorded because of large muscle artifacts evoked from the sacral area. The tibial SEP was similar to the pudendal SEP, except that the prominent P-N-P series in the 35- to 81-ms range was preceded by a smaller p-n-p-n sequence in the 7- to 23-ms range. The tibial SCEP consisted of a P-N-P series in the 2- to 4-ms range.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Type-I hypersensitivity as a component of eosinophilic myositis (muscular sarcocystosis) in cattle
1989
Granstrom, D.E. | Ridley, R.K. | Baoan, Y. | Gershwin, L.J. | Nesbitt, P.M. | Wempe, L.A.
Eight bovine hearts with lesions of eosinophilic myositis (EM) and 2 bovine hearts without EM lesions were collected at slaughter. Blood samples from these 10 hearts, and the heart of a newborn calf also were collected. Histologically, Sarcocystis cruzi was identified in the 8 hearts with EM lesions and the 2 hearts without EM lesions, but not in the heart of the newborn calf. Serum was harvested from the 10 blood samples and was used in homologous, modified, passive cutaneous anaphylaxis test. Antigen was prepared from S cruzi bradyzoites isolated from the 2 hearts without EM lesions. Serum samples from the 8 cattle with EM lesions reacted positively to S cruzi antigen. When heat-inactivated IgE in serum (56 C for 4 hours) was used, all passive cutaneous anaphylaxis responses were considered negative. Using ELISA, serum IgE concentrations from the 10 cattle with and without EM lesions were 2.2 to 9 U/ml. As determined by radial immunodiffusion, IgM concentrations were 80 to 215 mg/dl. Immunoglobulin G concentrations were 420 to 2,050 mg/dl, but most were less than or equal to 1,700 mg/dl. Immunoglobin A concentrations were 0 to 62 mg/dl; 1 steer with EM lesions had 0 mg/dl. Double-gel immunodiffusion confirmed the presence of Sarcocystis-specific precipitating antibodies. Sera from the 10 cattle with and without EM lesions formed at least 1 precipitin band.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]