Background: Pain associated with osteoarthritis (OA) is frequently disabling; treatments are often ineffective or intolerable. Fasinumab selectively inhibits nerve-growth factor and has shown efficacy for the management of OA pain.
Methods: In this randomized, double-blind, phase III safety study, patients with moderate-to-severe OA pain and history of inadequate pain relief received placebo or fasinumab (at 1, 3, 6, and 9 mg every 4 weeks [Q4W] and 1 and 6 mg every 8 weeks [Q8W] for 52 weeks).
Objective: To determine the pharmacokinetics and physiological effects following oral and intravenous (IV) administration of gabapentin in goats.
Study Design: Prospective, crossover study with a 3 week washout period between treatments.
Animals: A total of eight healthy, client-owned, female goats.
A large, pedunculated cutaneous mass protruding from the left flank fold and an enlarged left prefemoral lymph node were found on examination of a 3-d-old crossbred Aberdeen Angus heifer. The calf was asymptomatic aside from peripheral lymphadenopathy, and the mass, along with the left prefemoral lymph node, was surgically excised. Histologic examination of the mass and the lymph node revealed a homogeneous population of neoplastic cells that stained positively with immunohistochemical stains S100 and melan A, supporting a diagnosis of congenital amelanotic melanoma with nodal metastasis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe broad spectrum of heat-related injury (HRI) and its associated lesions is well described in the human literature, with rare reports of similar findings in farm animals. In the current case series, lesions from 4 of 8 lambs that presented with clinical signs of heat stress are reported. Gross lesions at necropsy consisted of acute renal swelling and pallor in 2 of 4 lambs, muscle pallor in 2 of 4 lambs, and chronic bronchointerstitial pneumonia in each of the 4 lambs.
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