Abstract
Treatments for dyspepsia, which is commonly used in newborn calves in livestock production, rely on the use of antibiotics. Examples of this: sulfonamide, nitrofuran and other synthetic drugs. The use of these drugs does not always give positive results. With prolonged and unjustified systematic use of antibiotics, especially on farms, the therapeutic result is ineffective due to the fact that most microorganisms adapt to them. Antibiotics, together with pathogens of intestinal infections, suppress that part of the microflora that normally performs protective functions and do not allow beneficial microflora to colonize growths inside the intestines. When treatment is aimed at destroying pathogens, normal microflora is destroyed, which leads to the development of dysbacteriosis and negatively affects the development of immunobiological reactivity in the body of young animals, which is manifested in their clinical status. The studies conducted examined the development of new safe modern methods of treating young animals and the therapeutic effect of new medicinal substances.
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