Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Pharmacokinetics of inorganic cobalt and a vitamin Bsupplement in the Thoroughbred horse: Differentiating cobalt abuse from supplementation.
- Journal:
- Equine veterinary journal
- Year:
- 2018
- Authors:
- Hillyer, L L et al.
- Affiliation:
- British Horseracing Authority · United Kingdom
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While cobalt is an essential micronutrient for vitamin Bsynthesis in the horse, at supraphysiological concentrations, it has been shown to enhance performance in human subjects and rats, and there is evidence that its administration in high doses to horses poses a welfare threat. Animal sport regulators currently control cobalt abuse via international race day thresholds, but this work was initiated to explore means of potentially adding to application of those thresholds since cobalt may be present in physiological concentrations. OBJECTIVES: To devise a scientific basis for differentiation between presence of cobalt from bona fide supplementation and cobalt doping through the use of ratios. STUDY DESIGN: Six Thoroughbred horses were given 10 mL vitamin B/cobalt supplement (Hemo-15; Vetoquinol, Buckingham, Buckinghamshire, UK., 1.5 mg B, 7 mg cobalt gluconate = 983 μg total Co) as an i.v. bolus then an i.v. infusion (15 min) of 100 mg cobalt chloride (45.39 mg Co) 6 weeks later. Pre-and post-administration plasma and urine samples were analysed for cobalt and vitamin B. METHODS: Urine and plasma samples were analysed for vitamin Busing an immunoassay and cobalt concentrations were measured via ICP-MS. Baseline concentrations of cobalt in urine and plasma for each horse were subtracted from their cobalt concentrations post-administration for the PK analysis. Compartmental analysis was used for the determination of plasma PK parameters for cobalt using commercially available software. RESULTS: On administration of a vitamin B/cobalt supplement, the ratio of cobalt to vitamin Bin plasma rapidly increased to approximately 3 and then rapidly declined below a ratio of 1 and then back to near baseline over the next week. On administration of 100 mg cobalt chloride, the ratio initially exceeded 10 in plasma and then declined with the lower 95% confidence interval remaining above a ratio of 1 for 7 days. For two horses with extended sampling, the plasma ratio remained above one for approximately 28 days after cobalt chloride administration. The effect of the administration of the vitamin B/cobalt supplement on the urine ratio was transient and reached a peak value of 10 which then rapidly declined. However, a urine ratio of 10 was exceeded, with the lower 95% confidence interval remaining above a ratio of 10 for 7 days after cobalt chloride administration. For the two horses with extended sampling, the urine ratio remained above 10 for about 18 days (442 h) after cobalt chloride administration even though the absolute cobalt urine concentration had dropped below the international threshold of 100 ng/mL after 96 h. MAIN LIMITATIONS: Only one vitamin B/cobalt product was evaluated, a limited number of horses were included, the horses were not in full race training and the results may be specific to this population of horses. CONCLUSIONS: The results provide the basis for a potential strategy for allowing supplementation with vitamin Bproducts, while controlling the misuse of high doses of cobalt, through a combination of international thresholds and ratios of cobalt to vitamin B, in plasma and urine.
Find similar cases for your pet
PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.
Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29053883/