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America's Pet Store On The Web |
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Pet Prescription and
non-Rx Meds |
The Pharmacy
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PET MEDICATIONS...What are they for? Learn about what goes on in the animal hospital's pharmacy. New medications are available on a continuing basis to help improve the safety and efficacy of veterinary medications. |
Pet medications
and prescriptions need to be used with an understanding of their effects and side effects.
Only fresh, quality
pet medications should be used for dogs and cats... and
then used only as directed. Keep in mind that any
medication or drug may not be safe and effective for every individual dog or cat taking
that substance. Here's an example from human medicine: Aspirin is widely available without
a prescription and billions of aspirin tablets are consumed worldwide every year. On rare
occasions someone will have a bad reaction from taking aspirin. Does that mean that
aspirin is Bad and that it shouldnt be available to anyone? Does it mean
that no one should ever take an aspirin just because a few people
shouldn't? Likewise with pet medications we need to be vigilant
of undesirable side effects and should keep in touch with the dog or cat's
veterinarian when any questions arise regarding pet medications and their use.
Visit this
page to see why medications sometimes seem expensive. |
Lets get acquainted with the Pharmacy by first getting to know |
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EXPIRATION DATE: |
SIDE
EFFECTS: A side effect is any response that is not the desired effect of a drug or medication. So if an antihistamine is prescribed in order to decrease nasal congestion due to an allergy and the patient also experiences a sluggish and sleepy mood as well, the drowsiness is considered to be a side effect. Since most dogs and cats dont drive or operate heavy machinery, the side effect of sleepiness may not be an important consideration. In fact, the side effect of the antihistamine might even be good. Maybe an antihistamine would be a good choice to use prior to a trip where the dog or cat would benefit from being slightly sleepy instead of barking or yeowling for four hours straight! So, side effects are conditions other than the one intended but remember, side effects can be good, bad or inconsequential. |
STRENGTH
and DOSE and DOSAGE: The strength of a medication is the concentration or weight of the substance. For example cats are often given Amoxitabs as an antibiotic. Usually they are given the 50mg (50 one-thousandths of a gram) strength tablet. Amoxitabs also come in other strengths such as 100mg, 200 mg and 400mg. The dose is the amount of the medication that an individual should take at one time. For on antibiotic the dose might be 8mg per pound of body weight and for another antibiotic the dose might be 25mg per pound. The dosage is the amount to take over a period of time. The prescription bottle might read 2 capsules every 8 hours until gone. This means that the doctor wants the patient to take two capsules at a time and repeat taking two capsules at eight hour intervals until all the medication is gone. (No, generally the time interval doesnt have to be exactly every eight hours! Just try to come close.) |
| MILLIGRAM |
An example of
the imperfect world we face in veterinary medicine can be seen when a dog or cat
experiences a reaction to a vaccination. On occasion, a potentially serious
reaction can occur shortly after receiving an inoculation. The patients blood
pressure drops, heart rate slows and the patient can
loose consciousness. Rapid measures may be needed
to save the patient. (I have seen this happen 3 times in 27
years of vaccinating dozens of
dogs and cats on a daily basis.) There are those who will flatly state that vaccinations
are bad for dogs and cats, not just because they can cause serious reactions
but they also believe that the vaccines cause future chronic ailments. I
wonder how many cases of Canine and Feline Distemper, or Canine Hepatitis and Parvovirus I
would have seen, and how many dogs and cats would have died from these preventable
diseases if I wished for a perfect world and didnt vaccinate all those pets for fear
of the occasional imperfection.
There are those in the Holistic community who will differ with some of the
information here in the Pharmacy. Strictly Holistic veterinarians have their reasons for
believing what they do and we all should keep an open mind when it comes to
non-traditional ways to medicate ourselves and our pets. However, historical facts
and unemotional data have proven beyond any reasonable argument that some drugs and
medications have very powerful health enhancing effects. On the other hand, if you are
looking for a perfect world where everything is predictable and 100% safe and
effective
you wont find that perfection in the Pharmacy or Lab.
The following article appeared in an issue of Dog World Magazine regarding the use of antibiotics in pets:
PET MEDICATIONS... ANTIBIOTIC USE AND MISUSE
by T. J. Dunn, Jr. DVM
Returning to his lab one morning in 1928 after a two-week vacation, Scottish
microbiologist Sir Alexander Fleming realized that one petri dish inoculated
with Staphylococcus bacteria had been accidentally left open. About to dispose
of the worthless moldy dish, he noticed a clear halo devoid of any bacterial
overgrowth surrounding each mold colony. For some strange reason the bacteria
weren’t growing in these small halos of agar surrounding the greenish mold.
Curious, as all scientists are, he asked himself why not? Instead of discarding
the “contaminated” petri dish, he explored the antibacterial properties of the
unusual mold, called Penicillium notatum, and the rest is history.
Since Fleming’s discovery of penicillin huge strides have been taken in the
research and development of wide varieties of antimicrobial chemicals, and
researchers continue to seek newer, safer, and more effective methods of
interfering with bacterial and other microorganism replication. One of the
greatest challenges veterinary and human doctors face today is to make
appropriate antibiotic selections that effectively help the patient recover from
bacterial, yeast and fungal infections… and at the same time to not harm the
patient.
How would harm come to a patient being administered antibiotics? One common
example is the over-prescribing of antibiotics… using them when not really
indicated.
Recently
a young Wirehaired Fox Terrier was presented to me because of sudden onset of
loose, foul smelling stool. There was no history of the dog having eaten
anything unusual, the diet was excellent, no intestinal parasites were evident
on the fecal analysis, and the patient was not dehydrated, vomiting, nor acting
depressed. The temperature was normal and abdominal palpation revealed a loose,
gassy and non-painful character. My diagnosis was a viral enteritis… call it
“intestinal flu” if you like. After discussing my diagnosis, and my preferred
treatment of withholding all dog food for 24 hours, allowing plenty of fresh
water, and simply allowing the dog to eat small amounts of yogurt every two
hours until the following day, the owner asked “Aren’t you going to give him
some antibiotics?”
I had to convince the concerned and skeptical owner that if my diagnosis was
correct, this patient did not need antibiotics and in fact might develop a much
worse diarrhea if we went that route. Plus, once an antibiotic is used in a
patient there is the potential for that patient to develop a resistant
population of bacteria. And someday, when antibiotics are truly needed, if that
antibiotic is chosen as a treatment the infection may be refractory to the drug.
What this patient needed was to have “good” bacteria reintroduced into the
gastrointestinal tract so that the correct balance of bacterial flora could be
reestablished. Antibiotic administration should be reserved for patients who
truly need them. Indiscriminate or casual use of antibiotics may lead to
bacterial resistance in a patient as well as set up the potential for a future
allergic reaction to the drug.
Conversely, in urinary tract infections and in skin infection cases called
pyoderma, long-term administration of antibiotics may be necessary to eliminate
tough infections. Often, with pyoderma, antibiotics are actually
under-prescribed. According to veterinary dermatologist Rusty Muse of Tustin,
California, most pyoderma cases require an
appropriate antibiotic for as long as six to eight weeks to be effective. Dr.
Muse states, “The skin receives only 4% of the heart’s output so effective blood
delivery of antibiotic concentrations have a much more difficult time saturating
the skin cells in microbe-killing amounts than in organs well perfused with
blood such as the liver. At our dermatology clinic we have discovered that about
10% of the ‘allergy’ patients are actually suffering from chronic pyoderma and
have not responded well to antibiotics previously used. Sometimes that failure
for an infection to clear is due to too low of a dose being given or the dose
not being given as often as directed or for as long as directed. In some cases,
especially if a culture and sensitivity
have not been done, the antibiotic
chosen may not be the best choice for the
specific bacteria causing the pyoderma.
“There are four principles to keep in mind regarding appropriate antibiotic
use,” continues Dr. Muse. “One is that the correct choice of antibiotic needs to
be made for a particular infection. The second is the proper dose must be given.
Third is that the dose must be
given
at defined intervals because some medications should be given once a day and
others four times a day to achieve consistent and effective tissue levels of the
antibiotic. And finally, the antibiotic needs to be given long enough to truly
effect a cure.”
In general, most veterinarians select what they consider to be an appropriate
medication, and if the results are not favorable, laboratory identification of
the bacteria and testing for the bacteria’s vulnerability to specific
antibiotics is done. This is termed “doing a culture and sensitivity”. Should
this be done in every situation where an infection is discovered? According to
Mark G. Papich, DVM, Professor of Clinical Pharmacology in the College of
Veterinary
Medicine at North Carolina State University, “For routine infections,
empirical treatment with ‘first line’ drugs can be used without obtaining lab
tests (culture and susceptibility tests) first. For refractory infections, or
cases that are more serious and/or life-threatening, lab tests are recommended.”
Some failures of antibiotic administration might be due to early withdrawal of
the drug by the owner when it appears that an infection has “cleared up”. Every
veterinarian has experienced the exasperation of faulty owner compliance with
prescription instructions. A typical scenario goes like this…the veterinarian
sees a patient again for the same problem a few months after prescribing an
antibiotic. A different prescription is suggested to fight the infection and the
owner says “I’ve still got quite a few left from the last
time, Doctor, should I just start those again?” Bingo! So that’s why the
medication didn’t work; it wasn’t used for the entire treatment time!
“Another concern regarding indiscriminate use of antibiotics in small animals”
states Papich, “is the resistance problem. When animals are exposed to
antibiotics, there is a good chance that the endogenous population of bacteria
will mutate or acquire resistance factors that may change them from being
susceptible to being resistant. When these bacteria later on are the cause of a
urinary tract infection, wound infection, or other opportunistic infection,
there is a good chance that they will be resistant to standard drugs.”
Some antibiotics, such as the tetracyclines, should not be given with dairy
products that contain lots of calcium because the calcium binds with the
antibiotic and reduces the effectiveness. Some antibiotics, as mentioned, must
be given every six hours, some every eight, some every twenty-four hours. One
prescription may need to be given with food and another on an empty stomach. One
group of antibiotic might cause severe diarrhea, another could permanently
discolor emerging tooth enamel if given to young pups, another group could cause
bone marrow suppression, and another could potentially do harm to the auditory
nerve and cause permanent deafness. The moral of this story is to expect
antibiotics to be used only when truly needed and then to be used according to
the directions. And if your veterinarian seems reluctant to dispense an
antibiotic when little Snuffy has the sniffles, now you know why. Take heart
that if the sniffles turn in to something worse, antibiotics are available if
needed.
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| Related Topics links below... | ||
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Learn all
about the veterinary laboratory |
Learn all about The Blood Chemistry Profile |
Why medications sometimes are expensive |
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An interesting
case that utilized the lab and pharmacy |
Pain management for dogs and cats | Why won't
my veterinarian write a prescription so I can obtain the medications
wherever I choose? Read this! |
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