Cullor, J. S., et al. “Comparison of the Use of Regulatory Assays and High-Performance Liquid Chromatography for Detection of Residues of Ceftiofur Sodium Metabolites in Tissue Specimens of Culled Dairy Cattle”. American Journal of Veterinary Research, vol. 65, no. 12, 2004, pp. 1730-3, https://scholar2.islandarchives.ca/islandora/object/ir%3A2736.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Cullor, J. S.
Author: Craigmill, A. L.
Author: Payne, M. A.
Author: Brown, S. A.
Author: Gardner, I. A.
Author: Robb, E. J.
Author: Wetzlich, S. E.
Date Issued
2004
Abstract

Objective - To compare the results of regulatory screening and confirmation assays with those of high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) in the detection of ceftiofur metabolites in the tissues of culled dairy cattle. Animals - 17 lactating Holstein dairy cows. Procedure - Daily IM injections of ceftiofur sodium were administered at a dose of 2.2 mg of ceftiofur equivalents/kg (n=6) or 1.0 mg of ceftiofur equivalents/kg (10) for 5 days. Following withdrawal times of 12 hours (high-dose ceftiofur) and either 5 or 10 days (low-dose ceftiofur), cows were slaughtered and liver, kidney, and diaphragmatic muscle specimens were harvested and analysed by HPLC and standard regulatory methods that included the following assays: the swab test on premises, the fast antimicrobial screen test, the calf antibiotic and sulfa test, and the 7-plate bioassay confirmation test. Results - In all tissue specimens, residues of ceftiofur and desfuroylceftiofur-related metabolites, as measured by HPLC, were less than regulatory tolerance, as defined by the FDA. False-positive screening assay results were more likely for tissue specimens that had been frozen for shipment to a federal laboratory, compared with fresh tissue specimens that were assayed at the slaughter establishment (23% vs 3% false-positive results, respectively). Conclusions and Clinical Relevance - The observation that fresh tissues had negative results on screening assays, whereas subsets of the same tissue specimens had false-positive results on screening assays following freezing, suggests that freezing and thawing interferes with microbial inhibition-based regulatory screening assays.

Note

Payne, M. A.: Environmental Toxicology Extension, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA.

Schaumburg; USA

American Veterinary Medical Association

ID: 6514; Accession Number: 20043215316. Publication Type: Journal Article. Language: English. Number of References: 17 ref. Registry Number: 80370-57-6. Subject Subsets: Veterinary Science; Veterinary Science

Source type: Electronic(1)

http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=lah&AN=20043215316&site=ehost-live; http://www.electronicipc.com/JournalEZ/toc.cfm?code=0429001

Language

  • English

Subjects

  • METABOLITES
  • drug residues
  • ruminants
  • animals
  • eukaryotes
  • thawing
  • ceftiofur
  • Pesticide and Drug Residues and Ecotoxicology (HH430) (New March 2000)
  • Animal Physiology and Biochemistry (Excluding Nutrition) (LL600)
  • antibiotic residues
  • Chordata
  • dairy cattle
  • Artiodactyla
  • freezing
  • techniques
  • Bovidae
  • ungulates
  • Veterinary Pharmacology and Anaesthesiology (LL882) (New March 2000)
  • mammals
  • vertebrates
  • Techniques and Methodology (ZZ900)
  • Bos
  • HPLC
  • cattle
Page range
1730-1733
Host Title
American Journal of Veterinary Research
Host Abbreviated Title
Am.J.Vet.Res.
Volume
65
Issue
12
ISSN
0002-9645

Department