呋喃唑酮对家禽厌食及硫胺利用的拮抗作用。

B H Ali, A L Bartlet
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引用次数: 21

摘要

呋喃唑酮(饲料中添加0.4% w/w, 10 d)降低了9周龄鸡的采食量和生长,提高了脑内5-羟色胺(5-HT)的含量。该药还增加了裂解血细胞中焦磷酸硫胺素(TPP)对转酮醇酶活性的刺激(TPP效应),以及血液中丙酮酸和乳酸的浓度。配对饲养试验表明,呋喃唑酮处理鸡的采食量减少可以解释生长下降的原因。这种药物还会使雏鸭和火鸡产生厌食症。这些观察结果表明,该药的厌食作用本质上不是色氨酸。在呋喃唑酮处理鸡的制剂中发现的TPP效应增加,在未给药饲料的成对饲养的鸡的制剂中没有发现。因此,TPP效应可以作为药物对鸡体内硫胺素状态影响的一个指标。然而,在呋喃唑酮处理的鸟类和未给药饲料的配对饲养的鸟类中,血液中丙酮酸盐和乳酸盐浓度均有所增加,表明这是由于采食量减少所致。在呋喃唑酮处理的鸡中,TPP效应为14-49 +/- 2.33% (n = 10),足以表明焦磷酸硫胺轻度缺乏。硫胺的剂量高于对鸡的维生素需求,并没有减少呋喃唑酮处理的鸟类的厌食症或TPP效应,尽管它刺激了未给药饲料的鸟类的采食量和生长。有人提出呋喃唑酮可能通过抑制硫胺的磷酸化而拮抗硫胺的利用。停用呋喃唑酮后,TPP效应恢复到对照值,雏鸟的生长速度增加,与对照相当。因此,这种药物的作用是可逆的。在饲料中添加浓度为0.01% w/w的呋喃唑酮28 d,不产生鸡的厌食症,也不影响脑内5-羟色胺的含量。因此,在这个水平上,药物不太可能对家禽产生不良影响。
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Anorexia and antagonism of thiamin utilization in poultry treated with furazolidone.

Furazolidone (0.4% w/w in the feed, 10 days) reduced the feed intake and growth in 9 week old chickens, and increased the amount of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) in the brain. The drug also increased the stimulation of transketolase activity by thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) in lysed blood cells (TPP effect), and the concentrations of pyruvate and lactate in the blood. Experiments with pair-fed birds showed that the reduction in feed intake in furazolidone-treated chickens could account for the reduced growth. The drug also produced anorexia in ducklings and turkey poults. In chickens, the anorectic action of furazolidone was unaffected by methergoline (1 mg/kg, twice daily, I.M), and in ducklings furazolidone did not consistently produce anorexia, although it always inhibited monoamine oxidase (MAO) activity in the brain. These observations suggest that the anorectic action of the drug was not tryptaminergic in nature. The increase in the TPP effect found in preparations from furazolidone-treated chickens was absent in preparations from pair-fed birds on unmedicated feed. Thus the TPP effect could be used as an indicator of the effect of the drug on the thiamine status of chickens. However, the increase in the concentrations of pyruvate and lactate in blood was found both in furazolidone-treated birds and pair-fed birds on unmedicated feed, showing that they were attributable to the reduction in feed intake. The TPP effect in furazolidone-treated chickens, 14-49 +/- 2.33% (n = 10), was sufficient to suggest a mild deficiency of thiamin pyrophosphate. Thiamin, given at a dosage above the requirement of the vitamin for chickens, did not reduce the anorexia or the TPP effect of furazolidone-treated birds, although it stimulated the feed intake and growth of birds on unmedicated feed. It is proposed that furazolidone antagonized the utilization of thiamin, perhaps by inhibiting its phosphorylation. Following the withdrawal of furazolidone, the TPP effect returned to the control value and the rate of growth of the birds increased and matched that the controls. Thus the effect of the drug was reversible. Addition of furazolidone to the feed at a concentration of 0.01% w/w for 28 days did not produce anorexia in chickens or affect the amount of 5-HT in the brain. Thus at this level, it is unlikely that the drug would produce adverse effects in poultry.

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