Szerzők:
-Lynn R. Hovda (Editor)
-Dionne Benson (Editor)
-Robert H. Poppenga (Editor)
ISBN: 978-1-119-67149-7
Megjelenés: November 2021
Kiadó: Wiley-Blackwell
Oldalszám: 544 Pages
Olvasson bele a könyvbe:
Tartalomjegyzék
Index
Index 2
Mintafejezet 1
Leírás:
A clinical quick-reference guide to managing toxicants in horsesBlackwell’s Five-Minute Veterinary Consult Clinical Companion: Equine Toxicology provides crucial information for managing toxicants in horses in a quick-reference format. The book begins with foundational information on clinical toxicology, including emergency management, antidotes, sample analysis, and necropsy. It then discusses specific toxicant categories and toxicants of concern, organized alphabetically for fast access in emergency situations.The identically formatted topics offer key information relevant to managing toxicants in horses, plus clinical photographs depicting plants and drugs to help clinicians and students identify toxicants. A companion website presents the figures from the book for download in PowerPoint.This book is the ideal clinical resource for busy practitioners seeking immediate access to life-saving information in time-sensitive em...
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
The editorsLynn R. Hovda, RPH, DVM, MS, DACVIM, is Director of Veterinary Services at SafetyCall International and Pet Poison Helpline in Minneapolis, Minnesota and Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Department of Veterinary and Biomedical Sciences at the College of Veterinary Medicine at the University of Minnesota in St. Paul, Minnesota, USA.Dionne Benson, DVM, JD, is Chief Veterinary Officer for The Stronach Group.Robert H. Poppenga, DVM, PhD, DABVT, is a Professor and Head of the Toxicology Section at the California Animal Health and Food Safety Laboratory System at the School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California at Davis in Davis, California, USA.
PERMISSIONS
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contributors List SECTION 1 CLINICAL TOXICOLOGY Chapter 1 Forensic Investigation of Equine Intoxications Chapter 2 Necropsy Analysis Chapter 3 Laboratory Testing Considerations Chapter 4 Treating an Intoxicated Animal: Antidotes and Therapeutic Medications Chapter 5 Compounded Medications SECTION 2 SPECIFIC TOXINS AND TOXICANTS Drugs: Illicit and Recreational Chapter 6 Cobalt Chapter 7 Cocaine Chapter 8 Dermorphin Chapter 9 Growth Hormones and Secretagogues Chapter 10 Marijuana Chapter 11 Methamphetamine and Amphetamine Chapter 12 Opioids Chapter 13 Selected Androgen (SARMS) and Estrogen (SERMS) Receptor Modulators Chapter 14 Synthetic Cannabinoids Drugs: Prescription Chapter 15 Antipsychotic Agents – Reserpine and Fluphenazine Chapter 16 Benzodiazepines Chapter 17 Beta2 Agonists – Clenbuterol and Albuterol Chapter 18 Bisphosphonates Chapter 19 Gabapentin Chapter 20 Iodine Chapter 21 Medroxyprogesterone Chapter 22 Methylxanthines: Caffeine, theobromine, theophylline Chapter 23 Nonsteroidal Anti-inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDS) Chapter 24 Thyroxine (Levothyroxine) Chapter 25 Vitamin D (calciferol) Insecticides, Herbicides and Farm Chemicals Chapter 26 Amitraz Chapter 27 Cholinesterase Inhibiting Carbamate Pesticides Chapter 28 Cholinesterase Inhibiting Organophosphate Pesticides Chapter 29 Fertilizers – nitrates, urea, phosphates and others Chapter 30 Herbicides Chapter 31 Paraquat and Diquat Chapter 32 Pentachlorophenol (PCP) Chapter 33 Pyrethroid and Pyrethrin Insecticides Ionophores and Growth Promotants Chapter 34 Ionophores Chapter 35 Ractopamine Chapter 36 Zilpaterol Metals Chapter 37 Arsenic Chapter 38 Fluoride Chapter 39 Iron Chapter 40 Lead Chapter 41 Selenium Mycotoxins / Fungus Chapter 42 Aflatoxins Chapter 43 Fescue (Endophyte-infected tall fescue) Chapter 44 Fumonisins Chapter 45 Fusaria Chapter 46 Slaframine Chapter 47 Tremorgenic Mycotoxins Other Toxins Chapter 48 Clostridium Botulinum toxin Chapter 49 Cyanide Chapter 50 Sodium Chloride (Salt) Plants and Biotoxins Chapter 51 Alsike clover (Trifolium hybridum) Chapter 52 Blue-Green algae (Cyanobacteria) Chapter 53 Cardiotoxic plants Chapter 54 Day blooming Jessamine (Cestrum spp.) Chapter 55 Death camus (Zigadenus spp.) Chapter 56 Hemlocks (Conium maculatum and Cicuta spp.) Chapter 57 Hoary alyssum (Berteroa incana) Chapter 58 Jimsonweed (Datura spp.) Chapter 59 Kleingrass (Panicum coloratum) Chapter 60 Lantana (Lantana camara) Chapter 61 Locoweeds (Astragalus spp. and Oxytropis spp.) Chapter 62 Narrow leaf milkweed (Asclepias fascicularis) Chapter 63 Nightshades (Solanum spp.) Chapter 64 Oleander (Nerium oleander and Cascabela thevetia) Chapter 65 Pyrrolizidine Alkaloids Chapter 66 Rayless goldenrod (Isocoma pluriflora) Chapter 67 Rhododendrons Chapter 68 Sudangrass (Sorghum spp.) Chapter 69 Tansy ragwort (Jacobea vulgaris) Chapter 70 White snake root (Ageratina altissima) Chapter 71 Yellowstar thistle / Russian knapweed (Centaurea solstitialis / Acroptilon repens) Chapter 72 Yew (Taxus spp.) Rodenticides Chapter 73 Anticoagulants Chapter 74 Bromethalin Chapter 75 Cholecalciferol Chapter 76 Phosphides Chapter 77 Sodium fluoroacetate (Compound 1080) Chapter 78 Strychnine Toxic Gases Chapter 79 Air Contaminants – CO, NH3, H2S Chapter 80 Smoke Trees Chapter 81 Black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) Chapter 82 Black walnut (Juglans nigra) Chapter 83 Box elder (Acer negundo) Chapter 84 Oak (Quercus spp.) Chapter 85 Red maple (Acer rubrum) Zootoxins Chapter 86 Blister Beetles (Epicauta spp. and Pyrota spp.) Chapter 87 Snakes – Crotalids (pit vipers) Chapter 88 Snakes – Elapids (coral snakes) Chapter 89 Spiders – Brown recluse spider and black widow spider Section 3 Reference Material Appendix 1 Abbreviations Appendix 2 Herbicides Appendix 3 Information Resources for Toxicology INDEX
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