Results suggest that male cats and cats from multicat households are more likely to exhibit urine marking behavior than females and cats from single-cat households. Results also suggest that attention to environmental and litter box hygiene can reduce marking frequency in cats, regardless of sex or household status of the cats, and may come close to resolving the marking problem in some cats.
Administration of fluoxetine hydrochloride for treatment of urine spraying in cats can be expected to considerably reduce the rate of urine marking. The frequency of spraying before treatment is predictive of the spraying rate when the drug is discontinued.
The pharmacokinetics and bioavailability of ticarcillin and clavulanate were determined after intravenous (i.v.) or intramuscular (i.m.) administration of ticarcillin disodium (50 mg/kg) combined with clavulanate potassium (1.67 mg/kg) to groups of healthy foals at 3 days and 28 days of age. After i.v. administration of the combination to five foals, the disposition kinetics of ticarcillin and clavulanate were best described using a two-compartment open model. Mean plasma elimination-rate constant (beta) and clearance (ClB) for ticarcillin were significantly less (P less than 0.01), and volume of distribution at steady state (Vd(ss)) was significantly larger (P less than 0.05), in the foals at 3 days compared with 28 days of age. This indicated that renal excretion mechanisms were immature and ticarcillin was more widely distributed in 3-day-old foals. The mean elimination rate constant for clavulanate was significantly less (P less than 0.01) at 3 days than at 28 days of age. Values of the major kinetic terms describing the disposition of ticarcillin after i.m. administration to five 3-day-old foals were not significantly different from values of these parameters in the same foals at 28 days of age. After i.m. administration of the drug combination, plasma clavulanate concentrations peaked significantly later (P less than 0.01), and the elimination-rate constant (kd) for clavulanate was significantly less (P less than 0.01), in 3-day-old foals than in 28-day-old foals. The bioavailabilities of ticarcillin and clavulanate after i.m. administration in 3-day-old foals were 100% and 88.3%, respectively, and in 28-day-old foals were 100% and 27.4%, respectively. Mean plasma ticarcillin concentrations exceeded 16 micrograms/ml for a longer period after i.m. administration of the drug combination than after i.v. administration to foals of both age groups. By virtue of the frequency of administration required and the painful response elicited by i.m. injection, it is recommended that when the combination of ticarcillin disodium (50 mg/kg) and clavulanate potassium (1.67 mg/kg) is used in foals to treat infections caused by susceptible organisms (MIC less than or equal to 16 micrograms/ml), it should be administered i.v. four times daily.
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