| Literature DB >> 28075379 |
Abstract
The spectrum of therapeutic need in veterinary medicine is large, and the availability of approved drug products for all veterinary species and indications is relatively small. For this reason, extemporaneous preparation, or compounding, of drugs is commonly employed to provide veterinary medical therapies. The scope of veterinary compounding is broad and focused primarily on meeting the therapeutic needs of companion animals and not food-producing animals in order to avoid human exposure to drug residues. As beneficial as compounded medical therapies may be to animal patients, these therapies are not without risks, and serious adverse events may occur from poor quality compounds or excipients that are uniquely toxic when administered to a given species. Other challenges in extemporaneous compounding for animals include significant regulatory variation across the global veterinary community, a relative lack of validated compounding formulas for use in animals, and poor adherence by compounders to established compounding standards. The information presented in this article is intended to provide an overview of the current landscape of compounding for animals; a discussion on associated benefits, risks, and challenges; and resources to aid compounders in preparing animal compounds of the highest possible quality.Entities:
Keywords: compounding; veterinary; veterinary pharmacy
Year: 2017 PMID: 28075379 PMCID: PMC5374371 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics9010005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.321
Toxic drugs, excipients and foods by species and resultant toxicity.
| Drug/Excipient/Food | Species Affected | Toxicity |
|---|---|---|
| Avocado [ | Birds | Pulmonary congestion, non-suppurative inflammation of the liver, kidney, pancreas, skin, and proventriculus |
| Benzocaine, benzoic acid derivatives [ | Cats | Red blood cell oxidative injury, hemolytic anemia |
| Chocolate [ | Dogs, birds | Cardiovascular and central nervous system stimulation (artificial flavors are not toxic but encourage an attraction to the natural substance) |
| Cremophor [ | Dogs | Histamine release, anaphylaxis |
| Garlic, onions [ | Dogs, cats | Hemolytic anemia (artificial flavors are not toxic but encourage an attraction to the natural substance) |
| Grapes, raisins [ | Dogs | Renal toxicity (artificial flavors are not toxic but encourage an attraction to the natural substance) |
| Macadamia nuts [ | Dogs | Lethargy, hyperthermia, ataxia, vomiting (artificial flavors are not toxic but encourage an attraction to the natural substance) |
| Polysorbate 80 [ | Dogs | Histamine release, anaphylaxis |
| Xylitol [ | Dogs, birds | Profound hypoglycemia and hepatocellular necrosis |