Comparison of the serum pharmacokinetics of a long acting and a conventional oxytetracycline injection
- 26 October 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Veterinary Record
- Vol. 117 (17) , 426-429
- https://doi.org/10.1136/vr.117.17.426
Abstract
A crossover study was carried out in cattle to determine the serum pharmacokinetics of a standard dose (20 mg/kg bodyweight) of oxytetracycline given either as a conventional injectable formulation or as a long acting formulation. For reference purposes, an intravenous treatment (also given at 20 mg/kg) was included in the trial protocol. A comparison of the two treatment regimes showed that the long acting formulation gave a significantly lower peak oxytetracycline serum concentration, with a significant extension of drug serum concentration. The long acting formulation also showed a longer serum half life and a significantly greater area under the curve value, calculated from 36 hours onwards, together with serum oxytetracycline concentrations which exceeded 0.5 microgram/ml for 86.8 as opposed to 51.5 hours for the conventional formulation. It is concluded that the use of the long acting formulation in cattle leads to a more sustained serum oxytetracycline concentration than does the same dose of conventional formulation.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Oxytetragyclines in CattleActa Veterinaria Scandinavica, 1983
- PHARMACOKINETICS OF OXYTETRACYCLINE IN YOUNG CATTLE - COMPARISON OF CONVENTIONAL VS LONG-ACTING FORMULATIONS1983