| Literature DB >> 27645697 |
Laura E J Peeters1,2, Els Daeseleire3, Mathias Devreese4, Geertrui Rasschaert3, Annemieke Smet2, Jeroen Dewulf5, Marc Heyndrickx2,3, Hein Imberechts1, Freddy Haesebrouck2, Patrick Butaye2,6, Siska Croubels7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cross-contamination of feed with low concentrations of antimicrobials can occur at production, transport and/or farm level. Concerns are rising about possible effects of this contaminated feed on resistance selection in the intestinal microbiota. Therefore, an experiment with pigs was set up, in which intestinal and fecal concentrations of chlortetracycline (CTC), doxycycline (DOX) and sulfadiazine-trimethoprim (SDZ-TRIM) were determined after administration of feed containing a 3 % carry-over level of these antimicrobials.Entities:
Keywords: Chlortetracycline; Cross-contamination; Doxycycline; Feces; Intestinal content; Oral bioavailability; Pigs; Sulfadiazine; Trimethoprim
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27645697 PMCID: PMC5028959 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-016-0803-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Fig. 1Mean concentrations (mean of six pigs + standard deviation) of chlortetracycline (CTC), doxycycline (DOX) and sulfadiazine (SDZ) in pig feces during 10 days of ad libitum feeding with feed containing 3 % cross-contamination levels of these antimicrobials. For CTC, concentrations rose from 4.97 mg/kg to a steady-state of approximately 10 mg/kg. Mean concentrations of DOX rose from 2.99 mg/kg to a steady-state of approximately 4 mg/kg. Mean concentrations of SDZ rose from 0.44 mg/kg to a steady-state of approximately 0.70 mg/kg
Oral bioavailability (F) compared to transfer ratio’s (TR) of chlortetracycline (CTC), doxycycline (DOX) and sulfadiazine (SDZ)
| Antimicrobial | F | TR | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CM | PCA | DCA | CD | Feces | ||
| CTC | 6 % [ | 69.6 % | 84.2 % | 71.4 % | 101.0 % | 102.5 % |
| DOX | 21–50 % [ | 24.3 % | 45.1 % | 36.6 % | 51.9 % | 55.4 % |
| SDZ | 85–100 % [ | 3.7 % | 3.5 % | 5.2 % | 4.2 % | 4.7 % |
TR’s are calculated by dividing the mean concentration (6 pigs) in the content of an intestinal segment (CM caecum, PCA proximal colon ascendens, DCA distal colon ascendens, CD colon descendens) after 10 days of feeding by the mean concentration in the feed. The mean concentration in the feces was taken over day 4 - day 10 (steady-state)
Fig. 2Concentrations of A) chlortetracycline (CTC), B) doxycycline (DOX) and C) sulfadiazine (SDZ) in cecal content and colonic content from three different sampling segments (6 indepentent observations per sampling segment). Samples were taken from 6 pigs per group after 10 days of ad libitum feeding with feed containing 3 % cross-contamination levels of CTC, DOX and SDZ. Mean concentrations in caecum (CM), proximal colon ascendens (PCA), distal colon ascendens (DCA) and colon descendens (CD) were 6.95, 8.41, 7.12 and 10.08 mg/kg (CTC), 1.78, 3.31, 2.68 and 3.81 mg/kg (DOX) and 0.47, 0.45, 0.67 and 0.54 mg/kg (SDZ), respectively. The two outlying values for CTC (observation 9 and 15) belong to one animal. A different letter (a or b) denotes a significant difference in concentration between sampling segments (p < 0.05)