Bovine Respiratory Disease (bovine + respiratory_disease)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Pharmacokinetics of gamithromycin in cattle with comparison of plasma and lung tissue concentrations and plasma antibacterial activity

JOURNAL OF VETERINARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, Issue 3 2010
R. A. HUANG
Huang, R. A., Letendre, L. T., Banav, N., Fischer, J., Somerville, B. Pharmacokinetics of gamithromycin in cattle with comparison of plasma and lung tissue concentrations and plasma antibacterial activity. J. vet. Pharmacol. Therap.33, 227,237. The pharmacokinetics (PK) and dose proportionality of gamithromycin (ZACTRAN®), a novel azalide, after a single intravenous (i.v.) dose of 3 mg/kg or subcutaneous (s.c.) injection at 3, 6 and 9 mg/kg body weight were studied in 13 male castrate and 13 female Angus cattle. Following i.v. administration, the mean area under the curve extrapolated to infinity (AUCinf) was 4.28 ± 0.536 ,g·h/mL, and mean elimination half-life (t1/2) was 44.9 ± 4.67 h, with a large volume of distribution (Vss) of 24.9 ± 2.99 L/kg and a high clearance rate (Clobs) of 712 ± 95.7 mL/h/kg. For cattle treated with s.c. injection of 3, 6 or 9 mg/kg, mean AUCinf values were 4.55 ± 0.690, 9.42 ± 1.11 and 12.2 ± 1.13 ,g·h/mL, respectively, and the mean elimination half-lives (t1/2) were 51.2 ± 6.10, 50.8 ± 3.80 and 58.5 ± 5.50 h. Gamithromycin was well absorbed and fully bioavailable (97.6,112%) after s.c. administration. No statistically significant (, = 0.05) gender differences in the AUCInf or elimination half-life values were observed. Dose proportionality was established based on AUCInf over the range of 0.5 to 1.5 times of the recommended dosage of 6 mg/kg of body weight. Further investigations were conducted to assess plasma PK, lung/plasma concentration ratios and plasma antibacterial activity using 36 cattle. The average maximum gamithromycin concentration measured in whole lung homogenate was 18 500 ng/g at first sampling time of 1 day (,24 h) after treatment. The ratios of lung to plasma concentration were 265, 410, 329 and 247 at 1, 5, 10 and 15 days postdose. The lung AUCinf was 194 times higher than the corresponding plasma AUCinf. The apparent elimination half-life for gamithromycin in lung was 90.4 h (,4 days). Antibacterial activity was observed with plasma collected at 6 h postdose with a corresponding average gamithromycin plasma concentration of 261 ng/mL. In vitro plasma protein binding in bovine plasma was determined to be 26.0 ± 0.60% bound over a range of 0.1,3.0 ,g/mL of gamithromycin. The dose proportionality of AUC, high bioavailability, rapid and extensive distribution to lung tissue and low level of plasma protein binding are beneficial PK parameters for an antimicrobial drug used for the treatment and prevention of bovine respiratory disease. [source]


Efficacy of metaphylactic florfenicol therapy during natural outbreaks of bovine respiratory disease

JOURNAL OF VETERINARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, Issue 5 2008
B. CATRY
The efficacy of an injectable formulation of florfenicol (300 mg/mL) as metaphylactic control of naturally occurring bovine respiratory disease (BRD) was evaluated in two double-blind randomly controlled field studies on two Dutch veal calf herds (A and B). Cattle aged not older than 3 months and in the direct presence of calves with clinical respiratory disease were randomly allocated to treatment with 40 mg/kg florfenicol subcutaneously (s.c.) a positive control treatment (12.5 mg/kg tilmicosin p.o. twice daily for five consecutive days in herd A, and 12.5 mg/kg doxycycline p.o. twice daily for five consecutive days in herd B), or a negative control (one placebo saline s.c. administration on D0). The predominant respiratory pathogens present in pretreatment respiratory samples from affected animals were Mycoplasma bovis and Pasteurella multocida in outbreaks A and B, respectively. Metaphylactic administration of florfenicol resulted in a statistically significant weight gain, decreased rectal temperature for five consecutive days after treatment and decreased metaphylactic failure percentages compared with both positive and negative control groups. In summary, these studies demonstrated that a single s.c. injection of florfenicol is effective and practical for control of the bacterial component of BRD in veal calves. [source]


Dose determination and confirmation of a long-acting formulation of ceftiofur (ceftiofur crystalline free acid) administered subcutaneously for the treatment of bovine respiratory disease

JOURNAL OF VETERINARY PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, Issue 3 2002
B. HIBBARD
Hibbard, B., Robb, E. J., Chester Jr., S. T., Dame, K. J., Boucher, J. F., Alaniz, G. R. Dose determination and confirmation of a long-acting formulation of Ceftiofur (Ceftiofur crystalline free acid) administered subcutaneously for the treatment of bovine respiratory disease. J. vet. Pharmacol. Therap.25, 175,180. The objective of this work was to determine and confirm an effective dose of ceftiofur crystalline free acid sterile oil suspension (CCFA-SS, 100 mg ceftiofur equivalents (CE)/mL], a long-acting single-administration ceftiofur formulation, for the treatment of the bacterial component of bovine respiratory disease (BRD). Study 1 was a dose determination study that used an intratracheal Mannheimia haemolytica (Pasteurella haemolytica) challenge model to evaluate single-administration doses of CCFA-SS at 0.0, 1.1, 2.2, 3.3, 4.4 or 5.5 mg CE/kg body weight (BW) for the treatment of BRD. Data from this study were used to select doses for field testing in three multi-location clinical studies. In Study 2, the efficacy of a single administration dose of CCFA-SS at 4.4 mg CE/kg BW was compared with a negative control for the treatment of naturally occurring BRD in feedlot cattle. Treatments were administered when uniform clinical signs of BRD were present. Study 3 used a design similar to Study 2, and compared single-administration doses of CCFA-SS at 3.0 or 4.4 mg CE/kg BW with the positive-control tilmicosin (Micotil® 300 Injection, Elanco Animal Health) at 10 mg/kg BW. Study 4 compared the efficacy of single doses of CCFA-SS of 1.1,8.8 mg CE/kg BW with tilmicosin at 10 mg/kg BW. A total of 1176 cattle were included in these clinical studies. In Study 1, a dose of 4.55 mg CE/kg BW was determined to be effective. This was rounded to 4.4 mg CE/kg for field testing. In Study 2, a single dose of CCFA-SS at 4.4 mg CE/kg BW had a higher treatment success rate on day 14 (61%) than negative controls (26%, P < 0.01). However, in Study 3 this dose was judged to be at the beginning of an efficacious dose range for the treatment of BRD when compared with tilmicosin. In Study 4, day 28 treatment success rates were higher for CCFA-SS at 4.4,8.8 CE/kg BW than for tilmicosin (P=0.002) or the noneffective CCFA-SS dose of 1.1 mg CE/kg BW (P < 0.001). Based on decision criteria for Study 4, the effective dose was determined to be 4.4,5.5 mg CE/kg BW. These clinical studies demonstrated that a single dose of CCFA-SS (100 mg CE/mL) administered subcutaneously (s.c.) in the neck at 4.4,5.5 mg CE/kg BW is an effective treatment for BRD in feedlot cattle. However, this route of administration is no longer being considered for this formulation because of the ceftiofur residues that are present at the injection site for extended periods of time. [source]


Proteomic analysis using an unfinished bacterial genome: The effects of subminimum inhibitory concentrations of antibiotics on Mannheimia haemolytica virulence factor expression

PROTEINS: STRUCTURE, FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS, Issue 18 2005
Bindu Nanduri
Abstract Here we identify, using nonelectrophoretic proteomics, effects of subminimum inhibitory concentrations (subMIC) of two antibiotic preparations, chlortetracycline (CTC), and chlortetracycline-sulfamethazine (CTC,+,SMZ), on protein expression in the bovine respiratory pathogen Mannheimia haemolytica. The M. haemolytica genome is currently in draft form, and annotation is incomplete. Relying on the principle of gene sequence conservation across species, we used annotated genomes from closely related species to identify, confirm, and functionally annotate 495 M. haemolytica proteins. To conduct quantitative comparative proteomics, we developed a protein quantitation method based on the cross correlation function of the SEQUEST algorithm. When M. haemolytica was cultivated in the presence of 1/4 MIC of CTC and CTC,+,SMZ, expression of proteins involved in energy production, nucleotide metabolism, translation, and the bacterial stress response (chaperones) were affected. The most notable subMIC effect was a significant decrease in the expression of leukotoxin A, which is an important M. haemolytica virulence factor. Reduction in leukotoxin expression could be one of the molecular mechanisms responsible for the efficacy of these antibiotics against bovine respiratory disease. [source]


Clinical efficacy of diclofenac sodium and flunixin meglumine as adjuncts to antibacterial treatment of respiratory disease of calves

AUSTRALIAN VETERINARY JOURNAL, Issue 6 2010
M Guzel
Objective To compare the efficacy of the non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs, diclofenac sodium and flunixin meglumine as adjuncts to the antibiotic treatment of bovine respiratory disease (BRD). Procedure We randomly allocated 80 Holstein calves with BRD to three groups. All the calves received a dose of 2.5 mg/kg tulathromycin by single subcutaneous injection and two of the groups received, in addition, either 2.5 mg/kg diclofenac sodium as a single intramuscular injection (diclofenac group, n = 30) or 2.2 mg/kg flunixin meglumine as an intravenous injection on the first three consecutive days after tulathromycin administration (flunixin group, n = 30). All calves were given a clinical score prior to initial treatment (day 0) and after treatment (days 1, 2, 3, 7 and 14) by observing appetite, demeanour, rectal temperature, the rate and type of respiration, presence or absence of coughing, and nasal discharge. Results During the first 48 h, improvement of adverse signs of respiratory disease, such as pyrexia and elevated respiratory rate, and of a high clinical index score was significant in the two adjunct groups compared with the calves receiving antibiotic alone. The reduction in pyrexia was greatest in the diclofenac group. There were no statically significant differences between treatment groups with regard to eventual perceived recovery from respiratory disease in 14 days. Conclusion In this trial, a single intramuscular dose of diclofenac sodium was equally effective as three intravenous injections of flunixin meglumine given on consecutive days as adjunctive therapy for BRD. [source]