Comparative and Veterinary Pharmacology

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The human–animal bond has evolved and diversi?ed down the ages. Dogs, cats and even horses, have long ful?lled the role of faithful companion and indeed, as exempli?ed by the introduction of seeing and hearing dogs, there may be a critical level of co-dependency between the species. In the twenty-?rst century, the animal types that are kept as pets in many parts of the world are extensive ranging from reptiles through rodents to ruminants and beyond. As would be predicted by the nature of the relationship, the approach to treatment of a companion animal is often closely aligned to that which would have been offered to their owner. However, an increasing awareness of welfare issues, such as the recognition that animals expe- ence pain and the proven bene?ts of disease prevention in intensive farming units, together with the growth in zoos and wildlife parks, has increased the likelihood of food producing and non-domesticated animals receiving medicinal products during their life-time. Although many of the individual drugs or classes of drugs administered to animals are the same as, or derived from, those given to man, the safe and effective use of drugs in animals often cannot be achieved by simply transposing knowledge of drug action on, or behaviour in, the body from one species to another. The impact of the anatomical, physiological and pathophysiological variability that spans the animal kingdom can often profoundly alter drug response.

Author(s): Fiona Cunningham, Jonathan Elliott, Peter Lees (auth.), Fiona Cunningham, Jonathan Elliott, Peter Lees (eds.)
Series: Handbook of Experimental Pharmacology 199
Edition: 1
Publisher: Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year: 2010

Language: English
Pages: 348
Tags: Pharmacology/Toxicology; Veterinary Medicine; Medicine/Public Health, general; Drug Resistance; Pain Medicine; Sports Medicine

Front Matter....Pages i-x
Front Matter....Pages 1-1
Introduction....Pages 3-17
Species Differences in Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics....Pages 19-48
Comparative and Veterinary Pharmacogenomics....Pages 49-77
Drug Delivery Systems in Domestic Animal Species....Pages 79-112
Population Medicine and Control of Epidemics....Pages 113-138
Interspecies Allometric Scaling....Pages 139-157
Pain and Analgesia in Domestic Animals....Pages 159-189
New Technologies for Application to Veterinary Therapeutics....Pages 191-210
Front Matter....Pages 212-212
Genetically Modified Animals and Pharmacological Research....Pages 213-226
Antimicrobial Drug Resistance....Pages 227-264
Drug Residues....Pages 265-290
Veterinary Medicines and the Environment....Pages 291-314
Veterinary Medicines and Competition Animals: The Question of Medication Versus Doping Control....Pages 315-339
Back Matter....Pages 341-348