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Topic:Opioids

Opioids in horses refer to a class of drugs that interact with opioid receptors in the central nervous system to produce analgesic effects. These substances are used in veterinary medicine for pain management, sedation, and anesthesia in equine patients. Opioids such as morphine, butorphanol, and buprenorphine are commonly administered to horses to alleviate pain associated with surgical procedures, injury, or chronic conditions. The pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of opioids in horses can vary, influencing their efficacy and safety profiles. This topic includes a collection of peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the use, effects, and considerations of opioid administration in equine veterinary practice.
Effects of pharmacological agents on gastrointestinal motility.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1989   Volume 5, Issue 2 283-294 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30589-8
Gerring EL.The control mechanisms of gastrointestinal motility are complex. Extrinsic neurohormonal effects modulate an intrinsic system, often called the "gut brain," composed of nervous and neuropeptide components. To exert pharmacologic influence on GI motility, use is made of agents that mimic the external control system. Agents that stimulate opioid receptors, block adrenoceptors, block or facilitate acetylcholine action, or antagonize the action of prostaglandins are used to effect changes in GI motility. The major indications for pharmacologic intervention are to increase motility in constipation,...
Effect of butorphanol on equine antroduodenal motility.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    June 1, 1989   Issue 7 21-23 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb05649.x
Merritt AM, Campbell-Thompson ML, Lowrey S.Six healthy six to eight-month-old horses were surgically prepared with Ag bipolar electrodes sutured to the gastric antrum and duodenum. Leads from the electrodes were exteriorised through a stab incision in the flank. During experimental sessions the horses were lightly restrained in stocks and electrode leads were connected to a physiograph to record antroduodenal myoelectrical activity. Intravenous (i.v.) injection of 0.05 mg/kg bodyweight (bwt) of the opioid agonist/antagonist, butorphanol was followed within 2 to 3 mins by a normal appearing period of repetitive spike activity, or phase ...
A retrospective survey of anaesthesia in horses with colic.
Equine veterinary journal. Supplement    June 1, 1989   Issue 7 84-90 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb05663.x
Trim CM, Adams JG, Cowgill LM, Ward SL.The purpose of this survey was to identify complications occurring in horses with colic during anaesthesia and recovery from anaesthesia; and to determine any relationships between these complications and drugs used for induction or maintenance of anaesthesia. Two hundred and thirty nine horses were anaesthetised on a total of 250 occasions for colic surgery between January 1985 and May 1987. Of these, 189 recovered from 200 anaesthetic episodes. Most horses received xylazine and guaifenesin with either thiobarbiturate (68 per cent) or ketamine (24 per cent) and anaesthesia was maintained with...
Pharmacologic effects and detection methods of methylated analogs of fentanyl in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1989   Volume 50, Issue 4 502-507 
Weckman TJ, Tai CL, Woods WE, Tai HH, Blake JW, Tobin T.Pharmacologic effects of alpha-methylfentanyl and 3-methylfentanyl, analogs of fentanyl, were investigated in mares. The ability of an 125I-labeled fentanyl radioimmunoassay (125I-RIA) to detect these methylated fentanyl analogs in individual and pooled urine samples from horses was evaluated. Also, the ability of 7 fentanyl antibodies to react with fentanyl and fentanyl derivatives (sufentanil, alfentanil, and carfentanil) was investigated. Mares were studied in a locomotor test to determine the amount of stimulation methylated fentanyl analogs might induce. Two mares each were given alpha-me...
The search for the ultimate equine sedative: are we ‘Waiting for Godot’? Combined use of detomidine with opiates in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 2 96-97 
Jöchle W, Vähä-Vahe T.No abstract available
Narcotic analgesics, their detection and pain measurement in the horse: a review.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1989   Volume 21, Issue 1 4-12 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1989.tb02081.x
Kamerling S, Wood T, DeQuick D, Weckman TJ, Tai C, Blake JW, Tobin T.Narcotic analgesics produce pharmacological effects by interacting with specific opiate receptors. At least five major types of opiate receptors have been recognised. These include mu (morphine) and kappa (ethylketazocine) receptor types. Narcotic analgesics which interact with mu receptors produce locomotor and autonomic stimulation at doses that produce little or no analgesia. Therefore, use of these drugs as analgesics in equine medicine has not been very satisfactory. Theoretical considerations suggested that the role of kappa agonists in equine analgesia be investigated. Using a pure kapp...
Immunoassay detection of drugs in racing horses. XI. ELISA and RIA detection of fentanyl, alfentanil, sufentanil and carfentanil in equine blood and urine.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    January 1, 1989   Volume 63, Issue 1 129-152 
Tobin T, Kwiatkowski S, Watt DS, Tai HH, Tai CL, Woods WE, Goodman JP, Taylor DG, Weckman TJ, Yang JM.We have developed and evaluated a one step enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test for sufentanil and a 125I radioimmunoassay test for alfentanil as part of a panel of pre- and post-race tests for narcotic analgesics in racing horses. Our sufentanil ELISA test detects sufentanil with an I-50 of about 0.5 ng/ml. The test is rapid and economical in that it can be read with an inexpensive spectrophotometer, or even by eye. The test readily detects the presence of sufentanil or its metabolites in equine blood and urine from 1 to 24 hours respectively after administration of therapeutic or s...
Combined use of detomidine with opiates in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    September 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 5 331-334 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01540.x
Clarke KW, Paton BS.The effects of administration of one of four opiates (pethidine 1 mg/kg bodyweight (bwt), morphine 0.1 mg/kg bwt, methadone 0.1 mg/kg bwt, and butorphanol 0.05 mg/kg bwt) given intravenously to horses and ponies already sedated with detomidine (10 micrograms/kg bwt) were investigated. Behavioural, cardiovascular and respiratory effects of the combinations were compared with those occurring with detomidine alone. Addition of the opiate increased the apparent sedation and decreased the response of the animal to external stimuli. At doses used, butorphanol produced the most reliable response. Sid...
Use of a narcotic antagonist (nalmefene) to suppress self-mutilative behavior in a stallion.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1988   Volume 192, Issue 11 1585-1586 
Dodman NH, Shuster L, Court MH, Patel J.Nalmefene, an opioid antagonist, caused a decrease in self-mutilative behavior in a 500-kg stallion. Self-mutilative attempts were counted during a control period and on 4 subsequent occasions after the IM administration of 100 mg, 200 mg, 400 mg, or 800 mg of nalmefene. The frequency of self-mutilation decreased with increasing doses of nalmefene and was virtually abolished with the 800-mg dose.
Selected aspects of the clinical pharmacology of visceral analgesics and gut motility modifying drugs in the horse.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    April 1, 1988   Volume 2, Issue 2 85-91 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1988.tb02799.x
Kohn CW, Muir WW.Comparison of the visceral analgesic effects of xylazine, morphine, butorphanol, pentazocine, meperidine, dipyrone, and flunixin in a cecal distention model of colic pain indicated that xylazine produces the most relief from abdominal discomfort. Repeated administration of xylazine may reduce visceral pain so effectively that the seriousness of abdominal disease is obscured. Xylazine decreased propulsive motility in the jejunum and pelvic flexure of healthy ponies. Morphine and butorphanol also gave relief from visceral pain in the cecal distention model. Morphine may inhibit colonic, and buto...
Dose related effects of the kappa agonist U-50, 488H on behaviour, nociception and autonomic response in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    March 1, 1988   Volume 20, Issue 2 114-118 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1988.tb01471.x
Kamerling S, Weckman T, Donahoe J, Tobin T.Current opiate receptor theory suggests that kappa agonists should provide good analgesia without producing marked central nervous system stimulation. U-50,488H is an experimental narcotic analgesic that is a selective kappa agonist. In the present study, U-50,488H produced good analgesia in horses using both the skin twitch and hoof withdrawal reflex assays. Further, the analgesia was relatively long lasting (120 mins) compared to other mu-agonists tested in horses. The locomotor response to U-50,488H was less than observed with ethylketazocine and butorphanol, and has yielded the smallest lo...
Immunoassay detection of drugs in racing horses. III. Detection of morphine in equine blood and urine by a one step ELISA assay.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    February 1, 1988   Volume 59, Issue 2 259-278 
McDonald J, Gall R, Wiedenbach P, Bass VD, DeLeon B, Brockus C, Stobert D, Wie S, Prange CA, Ozog FJ.A one step enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) test for morphine was evaluated as part of a panel of pre- and post-race tests for narcotic analgesics in racing horses. This ELISA test is very sensitive to morphine with an I-50 for morphine of about 400 pg/ml. The test is also rapid, and ten samples, a normal pre-race complement, can be analyzed in about thirty minutes. The test can be read with an inexpensive spectrophotometer, or even by eye. The test readily detects the presence of morphine or its metabolites in equine blood for up to six hours after administration of sub-therapeutic d...
Central nervous system trauma.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1987   Volume 3, Issue 2 371-377 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30679-x
Stewart RH.Traumatic injury to the central nervous system causes immediate damage and sets in motion a complex series of pathophysiologic events that result in further neuronal injury. This secondary damage seems to be related to changes in blood flow and pressure on a systemic, regional, and microvascular level. Currently, there is evidence that these changes are, in part, mediated by endogenous opioids and arachidonic acid metabolites, namely thromboxane A2. Medical management is generally designed to intervene at one or more stages in this secondary cascade of events. Further research should lead us t...
Rapid reversible immobilization of feral stallions using etorphine hydrochloride, xylazine hydrochloride and atropine sulfate.
Journal of wildlife diseases    July 1, 1987   Volume 23, Issue 3 471-478 doi: 10.7589/0090-3558-23.3.471
Plotka ED, Seal US, Eagle TC, Asa CS, Tester JR, Siniff DB.Forty-eight newly captured free-ranging feral stallions (Equus caballus) from two different locations and six captive stallions were immobilized using combinations of etorphine hydrochloride, xylazine hydrochloride and atropine sulfate with or without acepromazine. Six animals were immobilized twice, 1 mo apart. The drugs were administered either intramuscularly (n = 13) or intravenously (n = 44). Mean immobilization time (+/- SE) after intravenous (i.v.) injection of etorphine, xylazine and atropine was 55 +/- 4 sec (range 20 to 185 sec) compared to 708 +/- 131 sec (range 390 to 1,140 sec) fo...
Beta-endorphin: peripheral opioid activity of homologues from six species.
International journal of peptide and protein research    April 1, 1987   Volume 29, Issue 4 521-524 doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3011.1987.tb02279.x
Ho CL, Ko JL, Li CH.The peripheral opioid activity of six homologous beta-endorphins (beta-EPs) were assayed on the guinea pig ileum and the vas deferens of the mouse, the rat and the rabbit. In the guinea pig ileum assay, human beta-EP (beta h-EP) was less potent than camel, turkey, and ostrich beta-EPs, of the same potency as equine beta-EP and more active than des-acetyl salmon beta-EP. In the rat vas deferens, mammalian beta-EPs showed higher activity than those from the bird and the fish, whereas in the mouse vas deferens assay, beta h-EP is more active than those from other species. In the rabbit vas defere...
Investigation into the use of narcotic antagonists in the treatment of a stereotypic behavior pattern (crib-biting) in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    February 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 2 311-319 
Dodman NH, Shuster L, Court MH, Dixon R.Crib-biting in horses is a repetitive behavior pattern which may involve the activation of both narcotic receptors and dopamine receptors in the CNS. Crib-biting frequency, determined in 7 nontreated horses under controlled conditions, was usually linear for many hours and ranged from 0.3 to 14.9 bites/min. Intravenous or IM injections of narcotic antagonists decreased these rates to almost zero by about 20 minutes after the injection was given. The duration of the response to a single injection ranged from 20 minutes for naloxone to 4 hours or more for nalmefene and diprenorphine. Effective d...
Unexpected responses following intravenous pethidine injection in two horses.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1987   Volume 19, Issue 1 72-73 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1987.tb02587.x
Clutton RE.No abstract available
Effects of amitraz, several opiate derivatives and anticholinergic agents on intestinal transit in ponies.
Equine veterinary journal    July 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 4 256-260 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03620.x
Roberts MC, Argenzio A.Amitraz, atropine, glycopyrrolate and morphine (but not its derivatives, meperidine [pethidine], oxymorphone and butorphanol) produced similar effects on clinically observed intestinal functions and significantly prolonged intestinal transit, as assessed with polyethylene glycol (PEG). However, their mechanisms of action, particularly on intestinal transport (fluid movement), may differ widely. Loperamide appeared to exert a preferential action on intestinal transport rather than motility, as there was no significant delay in PEG transit. The action of amitraz in perturbing smooth muscle coord...
Radioimmunoassay screening for etorphine in racing horses.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    May 1, 1986   Volume 52, Issue 2 237-249 
Woods WE, Weckman T, Wood T, Chang SL, Blake JW, Tobin T.A commercially available radioimmunoassay kit was used to screen for the presence of etorphine in post-race urines from horses racing in Kentucky. Most horse urines contained small amounts of materials which reacted positively in this immunoassay. These materials are apparently endogenous to the horse and were called apparent etorphine equivalents. The levels of these apparent etorphine equivalents in post-race urines from 70 horses were estimated. Their modal level averaged 0.1 ng/ml, the population distribution was log normal, and individual horses showed levels of up to 0.8 ng/ml.
Effect of postoperative pethidine on the anaesthetic recovery period in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    January 1, 1986   Volume 18, Issue 1 70-72 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1986.tb03543.x
Taylor PM.No abstract available
Opiate-like and adrenocorticotrophin-like materials in equine pancreas.
General pharmacology    January 1, 1986   Volume 17, Issue 4 397-404 doi: 10.1016/0306-3623(86)90181-3
Hon WK, Ng TB.Equine pancreatic acetone powder was extracted with an acetone-water-HCl mixture. An acid acetone powder resulted by adding a copious volume of acetone to the extract. The powder was subjected to salt fractionation, gel filtration and chromatography on CM-cellulose. Steroidogenic activity, ACTH-like immunoreactivity and opiate receptor binding activity were distributed among the CM-cellulose chromatographic fractions derived from material unretarded as well as from material retarded on Sephadex G-25. The data indicates a separation of steroidogenic and opiate receptor binding activities, and t...
Dose-related effects of ethylketazocine on nociception, behaviour and autonomic responses in the horse.
The Journal of pharmacy and pharmacology    January 1, 1986   Volume 38, Issue 1 40-45 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-7158.1986.tb04464.x
Kamerling SG, Dequick DJ, Weckman TJ, Tobin T.Sensitive methods for measuring the analgesic, physiological and behavioural effects of opioids in the horse have recently been developed. Fentanyl, a prototypic mu-opiate receptor agonist, has been previously shown to produce a syndrome characterized by marked analgesia and locomotor stimulation as well as tachycardia, tachypnoea and behavioural arousal. To determine whether other opiate receptors mediate some of the actions of the narcotic analgesics in the horse, an agent with activity at kappa- and to lesser extent mu-receptors was studied using a vigorous experimental protocol. Like fenta...
Immobilization of free-ranging desert bighorn sheep, tule elk, and wild horses, using carfentanil and xylazine: reversal with naloxone, diprenorphine, and yohimbine.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    December 1, 1985   Volume 187, Issue 11 1253-1254 
Jessup DA, Clark WE, Jones KR, Clark R, Lance WR.No abstract available
Colonic motor responses in the pony: relevance of colonic stimulation by opiate antagonists.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 1 31-35 
Roger T, Bardon T, Ruckebusch Y.The electrical and mechanical activity of the digestive tract and its response to the administration of opiate agonists and antagonists was assessed from electrodes and strain gauges chronically implanted on the jejunum and the cecocolonic segments in 3 ponies given a diet of hay and concentrates. Before the drugs were given, 10 to 17 migrating myoelectric complexes/day were recorded on the small intestine, and a rhythmic motor activity (base line) was observed on the proximal portion of the colon at the rate of 3.5 to 6.6/hour. Propagated contractions from the proximal to the distal portion o...
Effects of furosemide on the plasma and urinary concentrations and the excretion of fentanyl: model for the study of drug interaction in the horse.
American journal of veterinary research    September 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 9 1743-1749 
Soma LR, Korber K, Anderson T, Hopkins J.The effects of furosemide (0.55 mg/kg IV) on the plasma and urinary fentanyl (PFE UFE) concentrations were studied during steady-state conditions. The PFE during the steady-state period was 0.31 +/- 0.027 ng/ml, with no significant changes occurring, even though the rate of excretion of fentanyl (EX) increased during the 1st hour from 112.0 +/- 21.6 to 534.5 +/- 82.9 ng/minute. The EX returned to control levels within 3 hours, as did the UFE. The injection of furosemide increased glomerular filtration rate from 1.97 +/- 0.21 to 3.81 +/- 0.75 ml/kg/min. The fractional reabsorption decreased fro...
The effects of naloxone on endotoxic and hemorrhagic shock in horses.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    May 1, 1984   Volume 44, Issue 2 227-238 
Weld JM, Kamerling SG, Combie JD, Nugent TE, Woods WE, Oeltgen P, Tobin T.The effects of naloxone on the cardiovascular, hematologic and metabolic derangements associated with endotoxic and hemorrhagic shock were studied in unanesthetized horses. In the first of 3 experiments blood glucose and lactate levels, hematocrit, white, red and differential white cell counts, rectal temperature and clinical signs were obtained before and after endotoxin (10 micrograms/Kg) administration in 5 horses. In the second experiment, two groups of 3 horses received either intravenous naloxone (0.04 mg/Kg) or saline, 7 minutes prior to endotoxin. In a third experiment two groups of 4 ...
Combined use of sedatives and opiates in horses.
The Veterinary record    January 21, 1984   Volume 114, Issue 3 63-67 doi: 10.1136/vr.114.3.63
Nolan AM, Hall LW.The effects of four intravenous combinations, xylazine (0.7 mg/kg)/methadone (0.1 mg/kg), xylazine (0.7 mg/kg)/buprenorphine (0.004 and 0.006 mg/kg) and acepromazine (0.05 mg/kg)/buprenorphine (0.006 mg/kg) on arterial blood pressure, central venous pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate and blood gases were studied in four experimental ponies. With xylazine/buprenorphine and xylazine/methadone onset of sedation was rapid and obvious and although no surgical or diagnostic procedures were carried out, sedation was judged to be satisfactory for the next 30 to 40 minutes. Onset of sedation after ...
Pharmacokinetics and protein binding of morphine in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 5 870-874 
Combie JD, Nugent TE, Tobin T.Morphine could be detected in horses dosed with 0.1 mg of drug/kg of body weight for up to 48 hours in blood and 144 hours in urine. This dose of morphine elicited no observable effects and is a suggested analgesic dose. Computer analysis revealed that a 3-compartment open system was the best fitting model with a serum half life (t1/2(beta)) of 87.9 minutes and a urine t1/2(beta) of 101.1 minutes. Binding to equine serum proteins was linear over a drug concentration range of 3.88 X 10(-5)M to 3.50 X 10(-8)M and averaged 31.6%. In RBC-partitioning experiments, 78.1% of the drug was found in the...
Effects of naloxone on endotoxin-induced changes in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1983   Volume 44, Issue 1 103-109 
Moore AB, Roesel OF, Fessler JF, Bottoms GD.The value of naloxone (1 mg/kg of body weight/hr for 4 hrs), a beta-endorphin antagonist, was assessed in the management of endotoxin-induced shock in ponies. Three groups of 5 ponies each were used: controls, ponies given Escherichia coli endotoxin put untreated, and ponies given endotoxin and then treated with naloxone. Endotoxin-induced changes in hemodynamics, blood chemical values, regional blood flow, plasma enzymes, and energy supplies were measured at selected times during the first 6 hours after endotoxin was given. There was no evidence that beta-endorphins released during shock were...
Effects of enkephalins versus opiates on locomotor activity of the horse.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    March 1, 1982   Volume 35, Issue 3 405-419 
Nugent TE, Combie JD, Weld JM, Burns P, Tobin T.The enkephalins are small, pentapeptide neurotransmitter molecules which have reportedly been used in racing horses. In our experiments, D-Ala2-Metenkephalinamide and leucine enkephalin were administered to horses intravenously (IV) and intracisternally (IC). Leucine enkephalin had little effect on locomotor activity by either route at doses of 0.01 mg/Kg or less. Methionine enkephalinamide, an enzyme resistant enkephalin analog, had no significant effect when given IV (0.002 and 0.008 mg/kg). Other experiments involving intracisternal dosing with this long acting form at higher levels (0.005-...