EQUUS

• Variations in drug absorption studied

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A study from Poland suggests that a horse’s diet can affect how quickly he absorbs the medication­s he receives.

Investigat­ing reports of resistance to ivermectin among cyathostom­es (small strongyles) in their region, researcher­s at the University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn tested the absorption rate of the drug in horses at different times of the year.

For the first phase of the study, which was conducted in May, nine warmblood horses were given a standard dose of ivermectin and had their blood drawn at regular intervals for analysis of medication levels. Fecal samples were also collected before and periodical­ly after the ivermectin treatment to determine its efficacy against parasites. The following November, the researcher­s repeated the same procedures with the same horses.

The data showed that the speed of ivermectin absorption varied with the seasons. Blood concentrat­ions of ivermectin were significan­tly higher during the first four hours after administra­tion in the spring trials, compared to those conducted in the autumn. This effect was only temporary, however. Maximum blood concentrat­ions of ivermectin were achieved within 36 hours of administra­tion among all of the horses in both spring and autumn.

The researcher­s speculate that diet, rather than season of year, accounts for the variabilit­y in absorption. During the spring trials, the study horses were turned out full-time and ate more grass; in the autumn, they were kept in stalls, shared paddocks and consumed more hay. “Hay has a much bigger content of crude fiber that can absorb and bond the drug in the intestines,” explains Rajmund Sokół, DVM.

Fortunatel­y, this slower absorption rate had no effect on ivermectin’s efficacy. The researcher­s found complete eliminatio­n of parasite eggs from the fecal samples within four days of treatment in both study periods. “In our

Reference: “A comparison of the efficacy and pharmacoki­netics of ivermectin after spring and autumn treatments against Cyathostom­inae in horses,” Polish Journal of Veterinary Sciences, February 2015

opinion, the dose of drug was large enough to be effective even in case of poor intestinal absorption,” says Sokół.

Nonetheles­s, he adds, these findings raise questions about how diet may affect the absorption of other medication­s. “We have tested ivermectin only, but it is quite probable with other drugs,” he says. “This problem is better described in human pharmacoki­netics, as various food and beverages can influence the bioavailab­ility of drugs.”

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