Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Mitemcinal helps rabbits and dogs poop without loose stools
By Sudo, H et al.·Published in Neurogastroenterology and motility·2007·Fuji-Gotemba Research Laboratories, Japan·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Mitemcinal (GM-611), an orally active motilin agonist, facilitates defecation in rabbits and dogs without causing loose stools.
- Species:
- rabbit
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs with constipation were given a new medication called mitemcinal to see if it could help them have bowel movements without causing diarrhea. The dogs experienced faster relief and were able to defecate without the loose stools that can come from other treatments. This suggests that mitemcinal could be a promising option for managing constipation in dogs, allowing for better control over when they go to the bathroom.
People also search for: dog constipation treatment · mitemcinal for dogs · how to help my dog poop · dog bowel movement issues
Abstract
The effects of mitemcinal (GM-611), an orally active motilin agonist, on defecation were investigated in rabbits and dogs. In normal rabbits, within 0-3 h of dosing, orally administered mitemcinal (2.5-10 mg kg(-1)) increased stool weight in a dose-dependent manner without causing loose stools. Sennoside (12-48 mg kg(-1)) also facilitated defecation within 2-9 h of oral administration, but the stools were significantly loosened. In the morphine-induced constipation model, the stool weight of morphine-treated rabbits (1 mg kg(-1)) was only 37.5% of that of untreated animals. Mitemcinal (0.5-20 mg kg(-1)) dose-dependently increased stool weight without increasing stool water content. At the highest dose of mitemcinal, stool weight recovered to 83.9% of that of untreated animals. In normal dogs, mitemcinal (0.3-3 mg kg(-1)) reduced the time to first bowel movement after oral administration without inducing diarrhoea at any dose. These results indicate that mitemcinal facilitates defecation without inducing severe diarrhoea. It is suggested that mitemcinal may be a novel therapeutic agent for constipation that enables easier control of the timing of defecation because of the early onset and short duration of its action, compared with sennoside.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17391248/