Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Eye drops ropinirole works as well as IV apomorphine to make dogs
By Lee, Jack A et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2025·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Ophthalmic ropinirole is an equally effective emetic agent in healthy dogs compared to intravenous apomorphine.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study found that both intravenous apomorphine and ophthalmic ropinirole were effective at making healthy dogs vomit after they ingested something harmful. Ropinirole, a newer medication approved for this purpose, had a success rate of 100%, while apomorphine was slightly lower at 95.8%. However, apomorphine worked faster, inducing vomiting in about 1.2 minutes compared to nearly 9 minutes for ropinirole. Both medications had similar side effects, but ropinirole caused more eye redness and prolonged vomiting.
People also search for: dog vomiting treatment · ropinirole for dogs · apomorphine side effects in dogs
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Emesis is commonly induced in the veterinary setting due to toxin or foreign material ingestion. The dopamine agonist apomorphine is commonly used for this indication. The novel dopamine-2 specific agonist ropinirole was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for this indication in 2020. Data to compare the efficacy and adverse effects profile of these medications is important for clinical decision making. METHODS: This blinded randomized crossover trial compared the efficacy of intravenous apomorphine to ophthalmic ropinirole in 24 healthy dogs. Factors assessed include efficacy at inducing vomiting within 20 min, need for redosing of the emetic agent, time to start of emesis, and incidence of adverse effects. RESULTS: Both apomorphine and ropinirole were highly effective at emesis induction, with 95.8 and 100% success rates, respectively, and no difference between groups. Repeated dosing was needed after 20 min in 25% of the apomorphine group and 8.3% of the ropinirole group for successful emesis induction. Median time to onset was significantly shorter with apomorphine (1.18 min) than ropinirole (8.85 min). Incidence of adverse effects was similar, with a higher incidence of ocular redness and protracted vomiting in the ropinirole group. CONCLUSION: These results suggest similar efficacy of ropinirole compared to apomorphine, with similar adverse effect rates.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40166701/