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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Phenoxybenzamine for the treatment of severe nonresponsive diarrhea in the horse.

Journal:
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association
Year:
1982
Authors:
Hood, D M et al.
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

In a study involving horses, researchers tested a drug called phenoxybenzamine to see if it could help with severe diarrhea that didn't respond to regular treatments. They gave the drug to a total of 18 horses, including some healthy ones and others with diarrhea caused by different factors. While the drug worked well for most adult horses, one foal didn't show improvement, and another had unclear results. Overall, the findings suggest that phenoxybenzamine might be helpful for certain cases of diarrhea that are hard to treat, but more research is needed to understand how it works.

Abstract

Phenoxybenzamine, an alpha adrenergic antagonist, was administered IV to 6 clinically normal horses, 5 horses with experimentally induced diarrhea, and 7 horses with naturally-occurring diarrhea. It was established that a total of 2 mg of phenoxybenzamine/kg of body weight given in divided doses resulted in alpha adrenergic blockage of approximately 72 hours' duration, tranquilization, and mild constipation in the normal horse. The 5 experimental cases of diarrhea were involved in a laminitis research protocol in which laminitis was induced by oral carbohydrate overload. In all 5 of those cases, the severity of the diarrhea that accompanied the carbohydrate overload was reduced. The 7 clinical cases consisted of 2 foals and 5 adults with diarrhea, some of which were nonresponsive to conventional treatment. One of the foals did not respond to the phenoxybenzamine, and the other had a questionable response, whereas the 5 adults all responded favorably to the agent. It was concluded that phenoxybenzamine has a potential place in the therapy of some cases of diarrhea that are nonresponsive to conventional therapy. The mechanism of action of phenoxybenzamine on diarrhea is not known at this time.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/7085456/