Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - (Page P13) can tolerate higher doses and glucocorticoids with a longer duration. Thus, longer-acting injectable glucocorticoids such as methylprednisolone acetate are a particularly attractive alternative. Many veterinary dermatologists carefully utilize this drug successfully and safely for occasional therapy. Intermediate-term therapy. Often, less than one week of therapy (by either a single injection or daily oral medication) is necessary to break the pruritic cycle. Administer short-acting oral preparations every 48 hours or less often to mitigate suppression of the adrenal axis. Administer intermediateacting preparations every 72 hours or less. The safe annual steroid dose is a guideline to be considered in these patients. You should further investigate and treat the underlying cause of the inflammation and pruritus. According to the American College of Veterinary Dermatology Task Force on Canine Atopic Dermatitis, allergen-specific immunotherapy is the only mode of therapy shown to result in partial or complete remission of canine atopic dermatitis without the further need of additional antiinflammatory drugs. Glucocorticoids are an integral part of our pruritic patients’ comfortable existence. They have many advantages over other forms of therapy and can be safely used for therapeutic purposes. However, they are not without potential side effects. When prescribing glucocorticoids, as with so much of what we do, monitoring and client education are essential aspects of patient care. Guidelines for calculating glucocorticoid use1 By Candace Sousa, DVM, DABVP, DACVD As with any other class of drugs, glucocorticoids have clear value when used to treat a disorder for which they have proven therapeutic benefit and when administered at the appropriate dose, frequency, and duration of administration. The benefits of any therapy must always be weighed against the potential side effects. The primary dosing guidelines for glucocorticoid use is to always use an appropriate induction dose to gain effective control of the clinical signs for the shortest amount of time and then taper to the lowest effective dose possible to maintain control of the condition. Furthermore, the use of alternate day therapy has been recommended to minimize adrenocortical suppression and the other side effects of the prolonged administration of glucocorticoids. For alternate-day therapy to be successful, the administration of glucocorticoids with a duration of action of 12 to 36 hours (prednisone, prednisolone, or methylprednisolone) is necessary. When considering dose and duration, the following information may be used as a guide for the practitioner to consider when evaluating an animal needing an additional treatment course or long-term glucocorticoid therapy. These recommendations are based upon clinical experience and personal opinion. There is no evidence-based formula for what is safe, and individual variation in side effects also needs to be considered. Every animal and every disease condition differs. The following calculations allow a practitioner to look at the total dose of exogenous (prescribed) steroid administration through the lens of what a normal patient sees naturally through the endogenous production of cortisol. This combined with using the dosing guidelines listed above may be a helpful tool for veterinarians to determine the lowest effective, safe dose possible. This “safe annual steroid dose” is a starting point and does not replace the need for monitoring with examinations and laboratory testing as indicated for animals on long-term therapy. Calculating the “safe annual steroid dose” A normal dog manufactures 0.2 to 1 mg/kg/day of cortisol which is necessary to survive. This is illustrated by using a 40 kg dog as an example: 40 kg X 0.4 mg X 365 days = 5840 mg of cortisol produced / year2 Different glucocorticoids have different potencies. For example, prednisone (or prednisolone) is considered to be about 4 times as potent as hydrocortisone (cortisol), and methylprednisolone is about 5 times as potent. If you divide 5840 by 4 you get an equivalent amount of prednisone. Thus, this 40-kg dog would “see” in a normal physiologic state 5840 mg of cortisol / year, which is equivalent to approximately 1460 mg of prednisone (or prednisolone) / year. Assuming that an animal is receiving every other day therapy for longterm glucocorticoid administration and that the practitioner is dosing for the lowest effective dose, the following calculation maybe used as a guideline to help determine a “safe annual steroid dose.” BW (kg) X 30 = mg prednisone (prednisolone) / year3 or BW (lb) X 15 = mg prednisone (prednisolone) / year Considering the 40-kg dog: 40 X 30 = 1200 mg of prednisone to be the “safe annual steroid dose.” This value is less than the range of what is considered physiologic for that dog (5840 mg cortisol / year or 1460 mg prednisone / year). References/notes on pg 15. SPONSORED BY PFIZER ANIMAL HEALTH 13
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 Contents Leading Off Clinical Exposures Idea Exchange Stalking Stones Vaginitis in Dogs CE Form Advertiser Index Marketplace/Classifieds Mind Over Miller Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 (Page Cover1) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 (Page Cover2) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 (Page 527) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 (Page 528) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Contents (Page 529) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Contents (Page 530) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Contents (Page 531) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Contents (Page 532) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Contents (Page 533) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Leading Off (Page 534) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Leading Off (Page 535) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Leading Off (Page 536) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Leading Off (Page 537) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Clinical Exposures (Page 538) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Clinical Exposures (Page 539) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Idea Exchange (Page 540) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Idea Exchange (Page 541) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 542) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 543) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 544) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 545) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 546) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 547) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 548) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 549) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 550) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 551) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 552) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 553) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 554) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 555) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 556) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 557) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 558) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 559) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 560) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Stalking Stones (Page 561) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Vaginitis in Dogs (Page 562) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Vaginitis in Dogs (Page 563) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Vaginitis in Dogs (Page 564) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Vaginitis in Dogs (Page 565) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Vaginitis in Dogs (Page 566) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Vaginitis in Dogs (Page 567) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 568) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 569) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 570) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 571) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 572) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Marketplace/Classifieds (Page 573) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page 574) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page Cover3) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page Cover4) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P1) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P2) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P3) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P4) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P5) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P6) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P7) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P8) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P9) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P10) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P11) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P12) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P13) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P14) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P15) Veterinary Medicine - October 2008 - Mind Over Miller (Page P16)
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