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Pharmacology
Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Digestive System
The Ruminant Digestive System
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  • Behavior
  • Circulatory System
  • Clinical Pathology and Procedures
  • Digestive System
  • Emergency Medicine and Critical Care
  • Endocrine System
  • Exotic and Laboratory Animals
  • Eye and Ear
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  • Immune System
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  • Metabolic Disorders
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Chapters in Pharmacology
  • Pharmacology Introduction
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Cardiovascular System
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Digestive System
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Eye
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Integumentary System
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Muscular System
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Nervous System
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Reproductive System
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Respiratory System
  • Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Urinary System
  • Chemotherapeutics Introduction
  • Anthelmintics
  • Antibacterial Agents
  • Antifungal Agents
  • Anti-Inflammatory Agents
  • Antineoplastic Agents
  • Antiseptics and Disinfectants
  • Antiviral Agents and Biologic Response Modifiers
  • Ectoparasiticides
  • Growth Promotants and Production Enhancers
  • Vaccines and Immunotherapy
Topics in Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Digestive System
  • Overview of Systemic Pharmacotherapeutics of the Digestive System
  • Drugs Affecting Appetite (Monogastric)
  • Drugs to Control or Stimulate Vomiting (Monogastric)
  • Therapy of Gastrointestinal Ulcers (Monogastric)
  • Drugs Used in Treatment of Diarrhea (Monogastric)
  • Drugs Used in Treatment of Chronic Colitis (Monogastric)
  • Gastrointestinal Prokinetic Drugs (Monogastric)
  • Cathartic and Laxative Drugs (Monogastric)
  • Drugs Affecting Digestive Functions (Monogastric)
  • The Ruminant Digestive System
  • Drugs for Specific Purposes in the Ruminant Digestive System
  • Drug Disposition in the Ruminoreticulum
 
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The Ruminant Digestive System

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Other than the forestomachs (rumen, reticulum, omasum), the components of the ruminant GI tract are similar to those of monogastric mammals, and the use of pharmacologic agents to treat diseases of the glandular stomach (abomasum) and intestine follows principles common to both monogastric and ruminant species. Ruminants differ significantly from other mammals in that much of their feed undergoes microbial predigestion in the forestomachs, chiefly in the rumen and reticulum. There is also postgastric fermentation in the cecum and colon, but this is much less important than in some other herbivores, eg, horses.

Ruminoreticular motility or fermentation is depressed in many conditions, including improper feeding (overload or deficiency of specific nutrients), lack of water, infectious diseases, intoxications, lesions of any part of the upper GI tract, metabolic states (eg, hypocalcemia), or reduced flow of alkaline saliva that allows pH to fall and the microbial population to be altered to an extent that is harmful to the animal. (Also see Diseases of the Ruminant Forestomachet seq.)

The primary objectives of pharmacotherapy are to remove the cause and to promote the return of normal digestive function by meeting or reestablishing the requirements for optimal ruminoreticular function as quickly as possible. This may include any of the following: 1) ensuring an appropriate substrate for microbial fermentation; 2) providing any cofactors (eg, phosphorus, sulfur) that are necessary for microbial fermentative processes; 3) removing any soluble end-products, undigested solid residues, and gas; 4) maintaining continual flow culture of ruminal microorganisms; 5) ensuring that the contents of the ruminoreticulum are fluid; 6) maintaining optimal intraruminal pH (generally between 6 and 7); and 7) promoting active ruminoreticular activity.

Last full review/revision March 2012 by Johann (Hans) Coetzee

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