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The disposition of gentamicin in equine plasma, synovial fluid and lymph

13

Citations

37

References

1995

Year

Abstract

Plasma (P), synovial fluid (SF) and lymph (L) concentrations of gentamicin were studied in two trials. A lymph vessel in the hindlimb was cannulated. The day after surgery (trial A), P and L samples were collected for 12 h after intravenous injection of gentamicin sulphate at 2.2 mg/kg dose rate. Approximately 48 h after surgery (trial B), the fetlock joint of the cannulated hindlimb was catheterized and P, SF and L samples collected for 12 h after a similar intravenous injection. The kinetic parameters were similar to those in other reports and did not differ between trials (P < 0.05). The P, L and SF disposition profiles were similar. The 95% confidence interval for P & L concentrations overlapped 2-3 h after injection. Thereafter, parallelism between L and P concentrations was observed, but L concentrations were on average 60% higher than P concentrations, and elimination from L was slower than from P. The mean L/SF and P/SF ratios were 1.54 +/- 0.2 and 1.25 +/- 0.2, 2-4 h after injection. Gentamicin elimination from SF appeared to be slower than from L and P. Lymph cannulation is a viable technique for antibiotic disposition studies. A sample of any of the fluids 3 h after injection was representative of the others. While SF concentrations were of limited value for predicting tissue fluid (L) concentrations 3-8 after injection, P concentrations were a useful index.

References

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