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1.
Eight calves with suppurative arthritis were each given a single intramuscular injection of ampicillin trihydrate at a dose of 10 mg/kg. Ampicillin concentrations were measured serially in serum and in suppurative and normal synovial fluid over a 24-hour period. The mean peak serum concentration was 2.5 +/- 0.54 micrograms/ml 2 hours after injection. The highest concentration in normal synovial fluid was 3.5 +/- 0.40 micrograms/ml at 4 hours and the highest concentration in suppurative synovial fluid was 2.7 +/- 0.58 micrograms/ml at 2 hours. Overall mean ampicillin concentration in normal synovial fluid for the first 8 h (2.9 +/- 0.32 micrograms/ml) was significantly different from that in suppurative synovial fluid (2.1 +/- 0.33 micrograms/ml) and serum (1.9 +/- 0.30 micrograms/ml; p less than 0.05).  相似文献   

2.
Six healthy adult horse mares were each given a single injection of sodium cephapirin (20 mg/kg of body weight, IV), and serum cephapirin concentrations were measured serially over a 6-hour period. The mean elimination rate constant was 0.78 hour-1 and the elimination half-life was 0.92 hours. The apparent volume of distribution (at steady state) and the clearance of the drug were estimated at 0.17 L/kg and 598 ml/hour/kg, respectively. Each mare was then given 4 consecutive IM injections of sodium cephapirin (400 mg/ml) at a dosage level of 20 mg/kg. Cephapirin concentrations in serum, synovial fluid, peritoneal fluid, CSF, urine, and endometrium were measured serially. After IM administration, the highest mean serum concentration was 14.8 micrograms/ml 25 minutes after the 4th injection. The highest mean synovial and peritoneal concentrations were 4.6 micrograms/ml and 5.0 micrograms/ml, respectively, 2 hours after the 4th injection. The highest mean endometrial concentration was 2.2 micrograms/g 4 hours after the 4th injection. Mean urine concentrations reached 7,421 micrograms/ml. Cephapirin did not readily penetrate the CSF. When cephapirin was given IM at the same dose, but in a less concentrated solution (250 mg/ml), serum concentrations peaked at 25.0 micrograms/ml 20 minutes after injection, but the area under the serum concentration-time curve was not significantly different (P greater than 0.05). The bioavailability of the drug was greater than or equal to 95% after IM injection.  相似文献   

3.
Cephapirin (20 mg/kg of body weight, IV) was administered before and after 3 doses of probenecid (25, 50, or 75 mg/kg, intragastrically, at 12-hour intervals) to 2 mares. Clearance and apparent volume of distribution, based on area under the curve, were negatively correlated with probenecid dose. Clearance of cephapirin was decreased by approximately 50% by administration of 50 mg of probenecid/kg. Serum, synovial fluid, peritoneal fluid, CSF, urinary, and endometrial concentrations of cephapirin were determined after 5 doses of cephapirin (20 mg/kg, IM, at 12-hour intervals) without and with concurrently administered probenecid (50 mg/kg, intragastrically) to 6 mares, including the 2 mares given cephapirin, IV. Highest mean serum cephapirin concentrations were 16.1 +/- 2.16 micrograms/ml at 0.5 hour after the 5th cephapirin dose [postinjection (initial) hour (PIH) 48.5] in mares not given probenecid and 23.7 +/- 1.30 micrograms/ml at 1.5 hours after the 5th cephapirin dose (PIH 49.5) in mares given probenecid. Mean peak peritoneal fluid and synovial fluid cephapirin concentrations were 6.2 +/- 0.57 micrograms/ml and 6.6 +/- 0.58 micrograms/ml, respectively, without probenecid administration and 12.3 +/- 0.46 micrograms/ml and 10 +/- 0.78 micrograms/ml, respectively, with concurrent probenecid administration. Mean trough cephapirin concentrations for peritoneal and synovial fluids in mares given probenecid were 2 to 3 times higher than trough concentrations in mares not given probenecid. Overall mean cephapirin concentrations were significantly higher for serum, peritoneal fluid, synovial fluid, and endometrium when probenecid was administered concurrently with cephapirin (P less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Pharmacokinetics of sodium cephapirin in lactating dairy cows   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Sodium cephapirin was administered (10 mg/kg of body weight, IM) at 8-hour intervals in 4 consecutive doses to each of 6 lactating dairy cows. Blood, normal milk, mastitic milk, urine, and endometrial tissue samples were collected serially. Mean peak cephapirin concentrations in serum were 13.3 micrograms/ml 10 minutes after the 1st injection and were 15.8 micrograms/ml 20 minutes after the 4th injection (post[initial]injection hour [PIH] 24.33). The overall elimination rate constant value was 0.66/h and plasma clearance was 760 ml/h/kg. Mean peak cephapirin concentration in normal milk was 0.11 microgram/ml at PIH 2 and mean peak cephapirin concentration in mastitic milk was 0.18 microgram/ml at PIH 4. Cephapirin was not detected in the endometrium. The highest concentration of cephapirin in urine was 452 micrograms/ml, 2 hours after the 4th dose (PIH 26).  相似文献   

5.
Four healthy adult mares were each given a single injection of sodium cefoxitin (20 mg/kg of body weight, IV), and serum cefoxitin concentrations were measured serially during a 6-hour period. The mean elimination rate constant was 1.08/hour and the elimination half-life was 0.82 hour. The apparent volume of distribution (at steady state) and the clearance of the drug were estimated at 0.12 L/kg and 259 ml/hr/kg, respectively. Each mare and 2 additional mares were then given 4 consecutive IM injections of sodium cefoxitin (400 mg/ml) at a dosage of 20 mg/kg. Cefoxitin concentrations in serum, synovial fluid, peritoneal fluid, CSF, urine, and endometrium were measured serially. After IM administration, the highest mean serum concentration was 23.1 micrograms/ml 30 minutes after the 2nd injection. The highest mean synovial concentration was 11.4 micrograms/ml 1 hour after the 4th injection. The highest mean peritoneal concentration was 10.4 micrograms/ml 2 hours after the 4th injection. The highest mean endometrial concentration was 4.5 micrograms/g 4 hours after the 4th injection. Mean urine concentrations reached 11,645 micrograms/ml. Cefoxitin did not readily penetrate the CSF. Bioavailability of cefoxitin given IM was 65% to 89% (mean +/- SEM = 77% +/- 5.9%). One of the 6 mares developed acute laminitis during the IM experiment.  相似文献   

6.
Serum concentrations of metronidazole were determined in 6 healthy adult mares after a single IV injection of metronidazole (15 mg/kg of body weight). The mean elimination rate (K) was 0.23 h-1, and the mean elimination half-life (t1/2) was 3.1 hours. The apparent volume of distribution at steady state was 0.69 L/kg, and the clearance was 168 ml/h/kg. Each mare was then given a loading dose (15 mg/kg) of metronidazole at time 0, followed by 4 maintenance doses (7.5 mg/kg, q 6 h) by nasogastric tube. Metronidazole concentrations were measured in serial samples of serum, synovia, peritoneal fluid, and urine. Metronidazole concentrations in CSF and endometrial tissues were measured after the fourth maintenance dose. The highest mean concentration in serum was 13.9 +/- 2.18 micrograms/ml at 40 minutes after the loading dose (time 0). The highest mean synovial and peritoneal fluid concentrations were 8.9 +/- 1.31 micrograms/ml and 12.8 +/- 3.21 micrograms/ml, respectively, 2 hours after the loading dose. The lowest mean trough concentration in urine was 32 micrograms/ml. Mean concentration of metronidazole in CSF was 4.3 +/- 2.51 micrograms/ml and the mean concentration in endometrial tissues was 0.9 +/- 0.48 micrograms/g at 3 hours after the fourth maintenance dose. Two mares hospitalized for treatment of bacterial pleuropneumonia were given metronidazole (15.0 mg/kg, PO, initially then 7.5 mg/kg, PO, q 6 h), while concurrently receiving gentamicin, potassium penicillin, and flunixin meglumine IV. Metronidazole pharmacokinetics and serum concentrations in the sick mares were similar to those obtained in the healthy mares.  相似文献   

7.
Six mares were given 5 IM injections (at 12-hour intervals between doses) of amikacin sulfate at a dosage of 7 mg/kg of body weight. Serum amikacin concentrations were measured serially throughout the study; synovial, peritoneal, endometrial, and urine concentrations were determined after the last injection. Amikacin concentrations of the CSF were measured serially in 3 of the 6 mares; 1 of the 3 mares had septic meningitis. Mean serum amikacin concentrations peaked at 1 to 2 hours after IM injection. The highest mean serum concentration was 19.2 micrograms/ml (1.5 hours after the 5th injection). The highest mean synovial concentration was 10.8 micrograms/ml at 2 hours after the 5th injection; the highest mean peritoneal concentration was 16.2 micrograms/ml at 3 hours after the 5th injection. The mean endometrial amikacin concentration was 2.5 micrograms/g (1.5 hours after the 5th injection). Amikacin reached a CSF concentration of 0.97 micrograms/ml in the mare with meningitis, but amikacin was not detected in CSF of healthy mares. Urine concentrations reached 1,458 micrograms/ml. Pharmacokinetic values were estimated after the 1st injection (elimination rate constant = 0.31/hour; half-life = 2.3 hours; apparent volume of distribution = 0.26 L/kg), and after the 5th injection (elimination rate constant = 0.28/hour; half-life = 2.6 hours; apparent volume of distribution = 0.30 L/kg); significant differences were not observed.  相似文献   

8.
Six healthy adult mares were given a single IV dose (25 mg/kg of body weight) of chloramphenicol sodium succinate. Chloramphenicol concentrations in serum, synovial fluid, peritoneal fluid, and urine were measured serially over a 48-hour period. The highest measured serum chloramphenicol concentration was 6.21 micrograms/ml at 0.5 hour. Chloramphenicol was detected in synovial and peritoneal fluids, with mean peak concentrations of 3.89 micrograms/ml and 3.50 micrograms/ml, respectively, at 0.5 hour. Serum and synovial concentrations declined rapidly and were not measurable at 3 hours. Chloramphenicol could not be detected in peritoneal fluid at 6 hours. The serum half-life was 0.43 hour and the apparent volume of distribution was 2.83 L/kg. Urine concentrations of chloramphenicol peaked at 0.5 hour at 106.72 micrograms/ml and also declined rapidly. The drug could not be detected in the urine at 36 hours.  相似文献   

9.
Pharmacokinetics and serum concentrations of cephapirin in neonatal foals   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Six healthy foals, from 4 to 6 days of age, were given a single IM injection of sodium cephapirin (250 mg/ml) at a rate of 20 mg/kg of body weight. Serum concentrations of cephapirin were measured serially over an 8-hour period. The mean peak serum concentration was 21.2 micrograms/ml at 10 minutes. The overall elimination rate constant was 1.06/hr and the elimination half-life was 0.70 hour. The apparent volume of distribution at steady state was 1.06 L/kg and plasma clearance was 1,105 ml/hr/kg.  相似文献   

10.
Twenty-nine healthy 17- to 29-day-old unweaned Israeli-Friesian male calves were each given a single IV or IM injection of 10 or 20 mg of moxalactam disodium/kg of body weight. Serum concentrations were measured serially during a 12-hour period. Serum concentration vs time profiles were analyzed by use of linear least-squares regression analysis and the statistical moment theory. The elimination half-lives after IV administration were 143.7 +/- 30.2 minutes and 155.5 +/- 10.5 minutes (harmonic mean +/- SD) at dosages of 10 and 20 mg of moxalactam/kg of body weight, respectively. Corresponding mean residence time values were 153.1 +/- 26.8 minutes and 169.9 +/- 19.3 minutes (arithmetic mean +/- SD). Mean residence time values after IM administration were 200.4 +/- 17.5 minutes and 198.4 +/- 19.9 minutes at dosages of 10 and 20 mg/kg, respectively. The volumes of distribution at steady state were 0.285 +/- 0.073 L/kg and 0.313 +/- 0.020 L/kg and total body clearance values were 1.96 +/- 0.69 ml/min/kg and 1.86 +/- 0.18 ml/min/kg after administration of dosages of 10 and 20 mg/kg, respectively. Moxalactam was rapidly absorbed from the IM injection site and peak serum concentrations occurred at 1 hour. The estimated bioavailability ranged from 69.8 to 79.1%. The amount of serum protein binding was 53.4, 55.0, and 61.5% when a concentration of moxalactam was at 50, 10, and 2 micrograms/ml, respectively. The minimal inhibitory concentrations of moxalactam ranged from 0.01 to 0.2 micrograms/ml against Salmonella and Escherichia coli strains and from 0.005 to 6.25 micrograms/ml against Pasteurella multocida strains.  相似文献   

11.
Regional perfusion of carpal tissues by forced intramedullary administration of fluids was evaluated in 10 horses. Results of subtraction radiography after perfusion with a contrast medium demonstrated that perfusate was delivered to the carpal tissues by the venous system. Perfused India ink was distributed uniformly in the antebrachiocarpal and middle carpal synovial membranes. Histologically, the ink was within the venules of the synovial villi. Immediately after perfusion with gentamicin sulfate (1 g), the gentamicin concentrations in the synovial fluid and synovial membrane of the antebrachiocarpal joint were 349 +/- 240 micrograms/mL and 358 +/- 264 micrograms/g, respectively. When gentamicin concentrations in the synovial fluid of the antebrachiocarpal joint and serum were measured 0, 0.5, 1, 4, 8, 12, and 24 hours after carpal perfusion, the mean peak gentamicin concentration in the synovial fluid was 589 +/- 429 micrograms/mL. At hour 24, the mean gentamicin concentration in the synovial fluid was 4.8 +/- 2.0 micrograms/mL. The resulting peak gentamicin concentration in the serum was 23.7 +/- 14.5 micrograms/mL immediately after the perfusion; it decreased below the desired trough level of 1 micrograms/mL between hours 4 and 8.  相似文献   

12.
Healthy mature roosters (n = 10) were given gentamicin (5 mg/kg of body weight, IV) and, 30 days later, another dose IM. Serum concentrations of gentamicin were determined over 60 hours after each drug dosing, using a radioimmunoassay. Using nonlinear least-square regression methods, the combined data of IV and IM treatments were best fitted by a 2-compartment open model. The mean distribution phase half-life was 0.203 +/- 0.075 hours (mean +/- SD) and the terminal half-life was 3.38 +/- 0.62 hours. The volume of the central compartment was 0.0993 +/- 0.0097 L/kg, volume of distribution at steady state was 0.209 +/- 0.013 L/kg, and the total body clearance was 46.5 +/- 7.9 ml/h/kg. Intramuscular absorption was rapid, with a half-life for absorption of 0.281 +/- 0.081 hours. The extent of IM absorption was 95 +/- 18%. Maximal serum concentration of 20.68 +/- 2.10 micrograms/ml was detected at 0.62 +/- 0.18 hours after the dose. Kinetic calculations predicted that IM injection of gentamicin at a dosage of 4 mg/kg, q 12 h, and 1.5 mg/kg, q 8 h, would provide average steady-state serum concentrations of 6.82 and 3.83 micrograms/ml, with minimal steady-state serum concentrations of 1.54 and 1.50 micrograms/ml and maximal steady-state serum concentrations of 18.34 and 7.70 micrograms/ml, respectively.  相似文献   

13.
Pharmacokinetic values of sodium amoxicillin (22 mg/kg of body weight) in foals were determined after a single IM injection in 6 Quarter Horse foals at 3, 10, and 30 days of age. Serum amoxicillin concentrations were measured serially over a 24-hour period. The absorption of amoxicillin was rapid and followed a 1st-order elimination. Mean peak serum concentrations occurred 30 minutes after the injection in foals at all ages and were 17.31 +/- 9.59 micrograms/ml when the foals were 3 days old, 23.28 +/- 9.86 micrograms/ml when the foals were 10 days old, and 21.35 +/- 6.39 micrograms/ml when the foals were 30 days old. Serum samples collected beyond 8 hours after administration contained amoxicillin concentrations less than 0.05 micrograms/ml. The elimination rate constant increased with increasing age (0.5265 +/- 0.0891 hour-1 when the foals were 3 days old, 0.6494 +/- 0.1114 hour-1 when the foals were 10 days old, and 0.7112 +/- 0.1016 hour-1 when the foals were 30 days old). Serum clearance increased with increasing age (498.4 +/- 82.6 ml/hr/kg at 3 days, 631.6 +/- 170.5 ml/hr/kg at 10 days, and 691.2 +/- 127.3 ml/hr/kg at 30 days). Serum half-life decreased with increasing age (1.34 +/-0.243 hour at 3 days, 1.10 +/- 0.239 hour at 10 days, and 0.991 +/- 0.139 hour at 30 days), whereas the extrapolated concentration at time zero and apparent volume of distribution did not change during the first 30 days of age.  相似文献   

14.
Six healthy adult mares were given a single IV injection of trimethoprim (TMP)-sulfadiazine (SDZ) at a dosage rate of 2.5 mg of TMP/kg of body weight and 12.5 mg of SDZ/kg. Serum, synovial, peritoneal, and urine TMP-SDZ concentrations were measured serially over a 48-hour period. The highest measured mean concentrations of TMP and SDZ were found in the first (0.5 hour) sample of serum, synovial fluid, and peritoneal fluid. The mean peak concentrations of TMP and SDZ averaged 4.37 micrograms/ml and 21.81 micrograms/ml for serum, 2.95 micrograms/ml and 15.31 micrograms/ml for synovial fluid, and 3.88 micrograms/ml and 19.52 micrograms/ml for peritoneal fluid, respectively. Urine concentrations of the drugs were relatively high and peaked early. The elimination rate for TMP and SDZ averaged 0.41 and 0.26 hour-1, while the elimination half-life was 1.91 and 2.71 hours, respectively, and the volume of distribution averaged 0.59 and 0.52 L/kg, respectively.  相似文献   

15.
Serum concentrations of cefepime (BMY-28142) were determined for four dosing regimes, 10 mg/kg or 20 mg/kg, given as single subcutaneous (SC) or intramuscular injections (IM) to dogs. Serial serum samples were analyzed for the presence of cefepime by high-performance liquid chromatography. In experiment 1, the overall mean (+/- SEM) serum concentration (for a 12-hour period) after a dose of 20 mg/kg for SC and IM routes (4.9 +/- 0.74 micrograms/ml and 5.5 +/- 0.63 micrograms/ml, respectively) was twice that for the 10 mg/kg dose given either SC or IM (2.2 +/- 0.31 micrograms/ml and 2.8 +/- 0.47 micrograms/ml, respectively). There was no significant difference (p greater than 0.05) in mean serum concentrations for SC and IM routes of administration at the same dosage. In subsequent experiments, 5 doses of cefepime (20 mg/kg) were administered IM at 12-hour (experiment 2) or 24-hour (experiment 3) intervals. The mean (+/- SEM) peak serum concentration was 12.1 +/- 1.59 micrograms/ml, 2 hours after the 2nd injection in experiment 2. In experiment 3, the mean (+/- SEM) peak serum concentration was 10.9 +/- 1.34 micrograms/ml, 4 hours after the 1st injection. Mean trough concentrations in experiment 2 were greater than or equal to 0.5 microgram/ml and less than or equal to 0.5 in experiment 3. Multiple IM doses produced transient edema at the injection site and mild lameness in all dogs. Cefepime was highly active against single canine isolates of Staphylococcus intermedius, Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Escherichia coli, with minimum inhibitory concentrations of 0.125 microgram/ml, 1 microgram/ml and 0.3 microgram/ml, respectively.  相似文献   

16.
Gentamicin sulfate (2.2 mg/kg of body weight, IV) was given to anesthetized horses. Jejunal and large colon tissue samples (1 g), serum, and urine were collected over a 4-hour period. Maximum gentamicin concentrations in serum (10.06 +/- 2.85 micrograms/ml) occurred at 0.25 hours after injection. Maximum gentamicin concentrations in the large colon (4.13 +/- 1.80 micrograms/ml) and jejunum (2.26 +/- 1.35 micrograms/ml) occurred in horses at 0.5 and 0.33 hours, respectively. Tissue concentrations decreased in parallel with serum concentrations and were still detectable at the end of the 4-hour period. During the time that samples were collected, the total amount of gentamicin excreted in the urine ranged from 7.21 +/- 3.11 mg to 11.91 +/- 7.12 mg, with a mean urinary concentration of 57.01 +/- 5.37 micrograms/ml. Over the 4-hour collection period, the fraction of dose that was excreted unchanged in the urine was 4.8 +/- 1.9%. Pharmacokinetic analyses of the serum concentration-time data gave a serum half-life of 2.52 +/- 1.29 hours, volume of distribution of 227 +/- 83 ml/kg, and body clearance of 1.12 +/- 0.26 ml/min/kg. The half-lives of the antibiotic in the jejunum and large colon were 1.32 and 1.33 hours, respectively.  相似文献   

17.
After single oral administration of ketoconazole (30 mg/kg bodyweight [bwt]) in 50 ml of corn syrup to a healthy mare, the drug was not detected in serum. Ketoconazole in 0.2 N HC1 was administered intragastrically to six healthy adult horses in five consecutive doses of 30 mg/kg bwt at 12 h intervals. Ketoconazole concentrations were measured in serum, synovial fluid, peritoneal fluid, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), urine and endometrium. Mean peak serum ketoconazole concentration was 3.76 micrograms/ml at 1.5 to 2 h after intragastric administration. Mean peak synovial concentration was 0.87 micrograms/ml 3 h after the fifth dose. Similarly, mean peritoneal concentration peaked 3 h after the fifth dose at 1.62 micrograms/ml. Mean endometrial concentrations peaked at 2.73 micrograms/ml 2 h after the fifth dose. Ketoconazole was detected in the CSF of only one of the six mares at a concentration of 0.28 micrograms/ml 3 h after the fifth dose. The highest measured concentration of ketoconazole in urine was 6.15 micrograms/ml 2 h after the fifth dose. A single intravenous injection of ketoconazole (10 mg/kg bwt) was given to one of the six mares; the overall elimination rate constant was estimated at 0.22/h and bioavailability after oral administration was 23 per cent.  相似文献   

18.
Healthy mature pony mares (n = 6) were given a single dose of gentamicin (5 mg/kg of body weight) IV or IM 8 days apart. Venous blood samples were collected at 0, 5, 10, 20, 30, and 45 minutes and at 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 18, 24, 30, 36, 40, and 48 hours after IV injection of gentamicin, and at 10, 20, 30, and 45 minutes and at 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 18, 24, and 30 hours after IM injection of gentamicin. Gentamicin serum concentration was determined by a liquid-phase radioimmunoassay. The combined data of IV and IM treatments were analyzed by a nonlinear least-square regression analysis program. The kinetic data were best fitted by a 2-compartment open model, as indicated by residual trends and improvements in the correlation of determination. The distribution phase half-life was 0.12 +/- 0.02 hour and postdistribution phase half-life was 1.82 +/- 0.22 hour. The volume of the central compartment was 115.8 +/- 6.0 ml/kg, volume of distribution at steady state was 188 +/- 9.9 ml/kg, and the total body clearance was 1.27 +/- 0.18 ml/min/kg. Intramuscular absorption was rapid with a half-life for absorption of 0.64 +/- 0.14 hour. The extent of absorption was 0.87 +/- 0.14. Kinetic calculations predicted that IM injections of 5 mg of gentamicin/kg every 8 hours would provide average steady-state serum concentrations of 7.0 micrograms/ml, with maximum and minimum steady-state concentrations of 16.8 and 1.1 micrograms/ml, respectively.  相似文献   

19.
Six healthy adult mixed breed dogs were each given 5 oral doses of trimethoprim (TMP)/sulfadiazine (SDZ) at 2 dosage regimens: 5 mg of TMP/kg of body weight and 25 mg of SDZ/kg every 24 hours (experiment 1) and every 12 hours (experiment 2). Serum and skin concentrations of each drug were measured serially throughout each experiment and mean serum concentrations of TMP and SDZ were determined for each drug for 24 hours (experiment 1) and 12 hours (experiment 2) after the last dose was given. In experiment 1, mean serum TMP concentration was 0.67 +/- 0.02 micrograms/ml, and mean skin TMP concentration was 1.54 +/- 0.40 micrograms/g. Mean serum SDZ concentration was 51.1 +/- 12.2 micrograms/ml and mean skin SDZ concentration was 59.3 +/- 9.8 micrograms/g. In experiment 2, mean serum TMP concentration was 1.24 +/- 0.35 micrograms/ml and mean skin TMP concentration was 3.03 +/- 0.54 micrograms/g. Mean serum SDZ concentration was 51.6 +/- 9.3 micrograms/ml and mean skin SDZ concentration was 71.1 +/- 8.2 micrograms/g. After the 5th oral dose in both experiments, mean concentration of TMP and SDZ in serum and skin exceeded reported minimal inhibitory concentrations of TMP/SDZ (less than or equal to 0.25/4.75 micrograms/ml) for coagulase-positive Staphylococcus sp. It was concluded that therapeutically effective concentrations in serum and skin were achieved and maintained when using the manufacturer's recommended dosage of 30 mg of TMP/SDZ/kg (5 mg of TMP/kg and 25 mg of SDZ/kg) every 24 hours.  相似文献   

20.
OBJECTIVE: To determine the pharmacokinetics of fluconazole in horses. ANIMALS: 6 clinically normal adult horses. PROCEDURE: Fluconazole (10 mg/kg of body weight) was administered intravenously or orally with 2 weeks between treatments. Plasma fluconazole concentrations were determined prior to and 10, 20, 30, 40, and 60 minutes and 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, and 72 hours after administration. A long-term oral dosing regimen was designed in which all horses received a loading dose of fluconazole (14 mg/kg) followed by 5 mg/kg every 24 hours for 10 days. Fluconazole concentrations were determined in aqueous humor, plasma, CSF, synovial fluid, and urine after administration of the final dose. RESULTS: Mean (+/- SD) apparent volume of distribution of fluconazole at steady state was 1.21+/-0.01 L/kg. Systemic availability and time to maximum plasma concentration following oral administration were 101.24+/-27.50% and 1.97+/-1.68 hours, respectively. Maximum plasma concentrations and terminal half-lives after IV and oral administration were similar. Plasma, CSF, synovial fluid, aqueous humor, and urine concentrations of fluconazole after long-term oral administration of fluconazole were 30.50+/-23.88, 14.99+/-1.86, 14.19+/-5.07, 11.39+/-2.83, and 56.99+/-32.87 microg/ml, respectively. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Bioavailability of fluconazole was high after oral administration to horses. Long-term oral administration maintained plasma and body fluid concentrations of fluconazole above the mean inhibitory concentration (8.0 mg/ml) reported for fungal pathogens in horses. Fluconazole may be an appropriate agent for treatment of fungal infections in horses.  相似文献   

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