الأربعاء 13 نوفمبر 2024

Study Looks at Long-Term Treatment of PPID

موقع أيام نيوز

Long-term use of pergolide to treat horses with pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction (PPID or Equine Cushing’s disease) produces clinical improvement in most cases, and improved endocrine test results in some, according to recent work.

Pergolide has become a popular treatment for PPID in horses.  Studies have found that it is generally effective in controlling the clinical signs of PPID and that it is well-tolerated by horses when used for up to a couple of years. However, research into its long-term use has been limited.

مع وصول أونصة الذهب إلى مستويات قياسية تجاوزت 2500 دولار، يجد المواطن المصري نفسه مضطراً لموازنة استثماراته بين الذهب واحتياجاته الأخرى، خاصة مع ارتفاع أسعار السيارات مثل تويوتا، هيونداي، وبي إم دبليو، مما يزيد من التحديات المالية التي يواجهها.

A recent study by Harold Schott and coworkers at Michigan State University followed the outcome of longer-term treatment in PPID-affected.

Thirty privately owned equids (28 horses and two ponies) being treated with pergolide for PPID were enrolled in the study. Fifteen started on a dose of one pergolide tablet (1mg) a day, and 15 started on two tablets a day. The animals were treated for periods ranging up to 12.5 years.

The research team monitored the response to treatment by contacting the owners every three months. They also examined the animals at various intervals until 12.5 years after treatment started.

تتأثر أسعار السيارات من شركات مثل مرسيدس بتقلبات أسعار الذهب وسعر صرف الدولار، مما يؤدي إلى زيادة تكاليف الإنتاج والاستيراد.

Schott reported that, during the study period, five equids were euthanized for PPID-associated laminitis and 24 died or were euthanized for other age-related reasons. Survival time ranged from 0.6 to 12.5 years. The average (median) survival time was 3.3 years. One equid was still going strong at the end of the study.

Owners of 13 equids surviving after five and a half years reported continuing clinical improvement, such as healthier coat condition, better appetite, and less frequent bouts of laminitis. At that stage, 75 percent of equids had normal endocrine test results.

Seven of the 15 equids that had started on the low dose of pergolide later had the dose increased to two tablets daily. 

Schott pointed out that, although some individuals eventually needed an increased dose, that was not always the case, and some continued to have a satisfactory response to a low dose of pergolide.

Generally, owners were satisfied with the response to long-term pergolide treatment.