Abstract

BackgroundTopical ophthalmic atropine sulfate is an important part of the treatment protocol in equine uveitis. Frequent administration of topical atropine may cause decreased intestinal motility and colic in horses due to systemic exposure. Atropine pharmacokinetics are unknown in horses and this knowledge gap could impede the use of atropine because of the presumed risk of unwanted effects. Additional information could therefore increase safety in atropine treatment.ResultsAtropine sulfate (1 mg) was administered in two experiments: In part I, atropine sulfate was administered intravenously and topically (manually as eye drops and through a subpalpebral lavage system) to six horses to document atropine disposition. Blood-samples were collected regularly and plasma was analyzed for atropine using UHPLC-MS/MS. Atropine plasma concentration was below lower limit of quantification (0.05 μg/L) within five hours, after both topical and IV administration. Atropine data were analyzed by means of population compartmental modeling and pharmacokinetic parameters estimated. The typical value was 1.7 L/kg for the steady-state volume of distribution. Total plasma clearance was 1.9 L/h‧kg. The bioavailability after administration of an ophthalmic preparation as an eye drop or topical infusion were 69 and 68%, respectively. The terminal half-life was short (0.8 h). In part II, topical ophthalmic atropine sulfate and control treatment was administered to four horses in two dosing regimens to assess the effect on gastro-intestinal motility. Borborygmi-frequency monitored by auscultation was used for estimation of gut motility. A statistically significant decrease in intestinal motility was observed after administration of 1 mg topical ophthalmic atropine sulfate every three hours compared to control, but not after administration every six hours. Clinical signs of colic were not observed under any of the treatment protocols.ConclusionsTaking the plasma exposure after topical administration into consideration, data and simulations indicate that eye drops administrated at a one and three hour interval will lead to atropine accumulation in plasma over 24 h but that a six hour interval allows total washout of atropine between two topical administrations. If constant corneal and conjunctival atropine exposure is required, a topical constant rate infusion at 5 μg/kg/24 h offers a safe alternative.

Highlights

  • Topical ophthalmic atropine sulfate is an important part of the treatment protocol in equine uveitis

  • After a single dose of 1 mg atropine sulfate administered as a topical ophthalmic solution in the conjunctival sac, the plasma atropine concentration was of the same order of magnitude as after the IV administration (Fig. 1)

  • The absorption was rapid with a peak plasma concentration being observed within the first 30 min and plasma concentrations fell below LOQ two or three hours after atropine administration

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Topical ophthalmic atropine sulfate is an important part of the treatment protocol in equine uveitis. After topical administration of 1 mg atropine sulfate every hour in the conjunctival sac, intestinal motility decreased and clinical signs of abdominal pain developed in 4/6 horses [16] The onset of these adverse effects was between 11 h and 22 h after the first administered dose. 1 mg of topical ophthalmic atropine sulfate every six hours did not affect intestinal transit time or borborygmi-frequency, nor cause signs of colic or abdominal discomfort in another study in six horses [17]. These conflicting results suggest that the systemic atropine exposure after the less frequent dosing-protocol was not associated with a decrease in intestinal motility. The third aim was to relate the simulated atropine plasma concentration-time courses to the gastrointestinal motility response and development of signs of colic

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.