Analyze Diet

Topic:Pentazocine

Pentazocine is an analgesic medication used in veterinary medicine, including equine practice, to manage pain. It is classified as a synthetic opioid and functions by binding to opioid receptors in the central nervous system, thereby altering the perception of pain. In horses, pentazocine is often employed for its analgesic properties during surgical procedures or to alleviate moderate to severe pain associated with various conditions. The pharmacokinetics, efficacy, and safety profile of pentazocine in equine medicine have been the subject of various studies. This page compiles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the administration, effects, and potential applications of pentazocine in horses.
Effect of butorphanol, pentazocine, meperidine, or metoclopramide on intestinal motility in female ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    April 1, 1988   Volume 49, Issue 4 527-529 
Sojka JE, Adams SB, Lamar CH, Eller LL.Effect of butorphanol, pentazocine, meperidine, and metoclopramide on jejunal and pelvic flexure myoelectric and mechanical activity in 4 female ponies was investigated. The agent to be tested or saline solution was administered IV at the start of a 6-hour recording trial. In the jejunum, duration between activity fronts of regular spiking activity, defined as the length of the migrating myoelectric complex (MMC), was measured. The average duration of the MMC during control trials was 150 +/- 46 minutes. The average duration of the MMC after meperidine, butorphanol, pentazocine, and metoclopra...
Visceral analgesia: effects of xylazine, butorphanol, meperidine, and pentazocine in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1985   Volume 46, Issue 10 2081-2084 
Muir WW, Robertson JT.The visceral analgesic, cardiorespiratory, and behavioral effects induced by xylazine, butorphanol, meperidine, and pentazocine were determined in 9 adult horses with colic. Colic was produced by inflating a balloon in the horses' cecum. Heart rate, respiratory rate, mean arterial blood pressure, and cardiac output increased after cecal balloon inflation. Xylazine and butorphanol decreased the hemodynamic response to cecal balloon inflation. Meperidine and pentazocine had minimal effects on the cardiorespiratory changes induced by cecal balloon inflation. Xylazine produced the most pronounced ...
Furosemide, Patella vulgata beta-glucuronidase and drug analysis: conditions for enhancement of the TLC detection of apomorphine, butorphanol, hydromorphone, nalbuphine, oxymorphone and pentazocine in equine urine.
Research communications in chemical pathology and pharmacology    January 1, 1982   Volume 35, Issue 1 27-41 
Combie J, Blake JW, Nugent TE, Tobin T.We have investigated the action of five sources of beta-glucuronidase enzymes on the hydrolysis of glucuronides of apomorphine, butorphanol, hydromorphone, nalbuphine, oxymorphone and pentazocine in equine urine. For all glucuronides tested, Patella vulgata beta-glucuronidase yielded the largest thin layer chromatographic (TLC) spots. For oxymorphone, P. vulgata was the only treatment to yield detectable TLC spots under test parameters. For these six drugs, TLC spot size and chromatographic quality were compared between control horses and horses pretreated with furosemide four hours earlier. F...
Pharmacology of narcotic analgesics in the horse: selective blockade of narcotic-induced locomotor activity.
American journal of veterinary research    May 1, 1981   Volume 42, Issue 5 716-721 
Combie J, Shults T, Nugent EC, Dougherty J, Tobin T.The locomotor responses of horses given morphine and fentanyl were blocked or lessened by administration of naloxone or acepromazine. Naloxone given at the dosage of 0.015 mg/kg completely blocked the locomotor activity induced in horses given fentanyl (0.020 mg/kg of body weight). The locomotor stimulation produced by morphine given at the dosage of 2.4 mg/kg was reduced by 75% of naloxone (0.020 mg/kg). Acepromazine partially blocked the locomotor responses to fentanyl and morphine. This blockade activity reached its peak about 30 minutes after acepromazine was given (IV) and lasted more tha...
Objective tests of analgesic drugs in ponies.
American journal of veterinary research    August 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 8 1082-1086 
Pippi NL, Lumb WV.An equine model, subjected to three kinds of pain (superficial, deep, and visceral) was used to test effects of analgesic drugs. Two groups of ponies were used. In the first group of six ponies, six drugs (fentanyl, meperidine, methadone, oxymorphone, pentazocine, and xylazine) were given according to a Latin square experimental design, and tests were made at 30-minute intervals for 4 hours. Mean values (control) for the three kinds of pain were obtained before and after the tests and were compared with the mean values (drugs) obtained over 2- and 4-hour intervals (four and eight measurements ...
Cardiopulmonary effects of narcotic agonists and a partial agonist in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1978   Volume 39, Issue 10 1632-1635 
Muir WW, Skarda RT, Sheehan WC.The cardiopulmonary effects of the narcotic agonists morphine, meperidine, oxymorphone, and methadone and of the partial agonist pentazocine were examined in the pain-free adult horse. The drugs produced dysphoric followed by euphoric effects. Increases in heart rate, arterial blood pressure, and cardiac output were observed in all horses with all drugs. Arterial blood pressure remained increased even after heart rate and cardiac output had returned to base-line values. Respiratory rate generally remained unchanged or increased shortly after drug administration and then decreased insignificant...