The Veterinary clinics of North America. Food animal practice
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Vet. Clin. North Am. Food Anim. Pract. · Jul 1992
ReviewAssessment of the ruminant respiratory system.
With practice, complete use of the methods of this assessment: history, detailed examination of the head and neck, cough induction, chest auscultation and percussion, and chest auscultation following forced rebreathing can be completed within 10 minutes. The examination can provide a great deal of new information regarding the respiratory system that would go undetected on a more general physical examination. In cases in which the diagnosis is still in question or requires confirmation, this will also enable the optimal use of appropriate ancillary tests, as described in the article on ancillary testing for the respiratory tract elsewhere in this issue.
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Vet. Clin. North Am. Food Anim. Pract. · Mar 1992
ReviewPharmacologic considerations in the management of peripartum conditions in the cow.
As is true with the use of drugs in veterinary medicine in general, there are many controversial issues in the management of peripartum conditions in the cow. For example, the use of PG versus antibacterial drugs in the management of postpartum uterine infections has advocates for the use of either approach. Intrauterine versus systemic administration of antibacterial drugs for the prophylaxis or treatment of postpartum metritis is another area of debate. ⋯ The use of PG in the treatment of reproductive disorders, so commonplace and widely accepted in contemporary veterinary practice, is a relatively recent approach that continues to be refined with the development of new, more potent, more specific PG analogs. What will be the role of ceftiofur, a potent, third-generation cephalosporin that currently is approved only for the treatment of respiratory infections in cattle, in the management of reproductive tract infections? The fluoroquinolones, which represent a novel approach to the control of infectious diseases, are being increasingly used in veterinary and human medicine, and one may predict that these powerful antimicrobial drugs will find application in bovine practice, including for the treatment of peripartum infections. Pharmacologic manipulation of immune and defense mechanisms also is an approach with some promise.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Vet. Clin. North Am. Food Anim. Pract. · Nov 1986
Legal implications of the extra-label use of drugs in food animals.
Although the Food and Drug Administration has never sanctioned the extra-label use of drugs in animals, it has not, until recently, objected when veterinarians deviated from label instructions as long as such use did not result in violative residues in food products derived from treated animals. However, because of the potential human health hazards associated with abuse of this position, the FDA has developed a less lenient policy toward the extra-label use of drugs in food animals. A brief review of the legislated responsibility and authority of the FDA with particular reference to the extra-label use of drugs in food animals is provided. Emphasis is placed on how anesthetics and anesthesia adjuncts in food animals can pose human health hazards.