About: Clopidol is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 101 publications have been published within this topic receiving 1060 citations. The topic is also known as: Coyden & 3,5-Dichloro-2,6-dimethyl-4-pyridinol.
TL;DR: All the E. tenella isolates showed partial resistance against salinomycin, whereas varying degrees of sensitivity were observed against maduramicin and clopidol.
Abstract: SUMMARY A battery trial was conducted to evaluate the drug sensitivity in Eimeria tenella field isolates against the commonly used anticoccidials salinomycin (60 ppm), maduramicin (5 ppm), and clopidol (125 ppm) in broiler chicks. These anticoccidials were mixed in feed at d 12 of age, and inoculation was given on d 14 of age. Drug sensitivity was determined by using the global index, which is composed of percentage weight gain, FCR, lesion score, oocyst index, and mortality percentage. In the present study, all the E. tenella isolates showed partial resistance against salinomycin, whereas varying degrees of sensitivity were observed against maduramicin and clopidol.
TL;DR: The spectrum of resistance to seven currently used anticoccidial drugs in isolates of Eimeria obtained from farms two broiler complexes was examined and it was concluded that for drugs that have been used extensively, examination of isolates from one or two farms may give results applicable to the entire complex.
TL;DR: Weight gains of monensin-medicated treatments (with or without roxarsone) were significantly greater and the Severity of coccidiosis exposure was increased by an oocyst-seeding technique, increasing litter moisture content to 30% or higher, and various attempts to prevent early development of immunity.
TL;DR: This method was successfully applied to the monitoring of 51 field-incurred agricultural loamy-sand soil samples collected from 17 provincial areas throughout the Korean Peninsula and is simple and versatile, and can be used to monitor various classes of veterinary drugs in soil.
Abstract: This study was undertaken to develop and validate a single multiresidue method for the monitoring of ten multiclass emerging contaminants, viz. ceftiofur, clopidol, florfenicol, monensin, salinomycin, sulfamethazine, sulfathiazole, sulfamethoxazole, tiamulin, and tylosin in agricultural soil. Samples were extracted using an acetate-buffered, modified quick, easy, cheap, effective, rugged, and safe method followed by liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometric analysis in positive ion mode. Separation on an Eclipse Plus C18 column was conducted in gradient elution mode using a mobile phase of methanol (A) and distilled water (B), each containing 0.1% formic acid and 5 mM ammonium formate. The linearity of the matrix-matched calibrations, expressed as determination coefficients, was good, with R2 ≥ 0.9908. The limits of quantification were in the range 0.05-10 μg/kg. Blank soil samples spiked with 4 × and 20 × the limit of quantification provided recovery rates of 60.2-120.3% (except sulfamethoxazole spiked at 4 × the limit of quantification, which gave 131.9%) with a relative standard deviation < 13% (except clopidol spiked at 20 × the limit of quantification, which gave 25.2%). This method was successfully applied to the monitoring of 51 field-incurred agricultural loamy-sand soil samples collected from 17 provincial areas throughout the Korean Peninsula. The detected and quantified drugs were clopidol (≤ 4.8 μg/kg), sulfathiazole (≤ 7.7 μg/kg), sulfamethazine (≤ 6.6 μg/kg), tiamulin (≤ 10.0 μg/kg), and tylosin (≤ 5.3 μg/kg). The developed method is simple and versatile, and can be used to monitor various classes of veterinary drugs in soil.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that in vitro techniques can be used not only to titrate the activity of anticoccidial drugs and identify the stage of development where the drug is most active, but to determine coccidiocidal versus cocCidiostatic actvity as well.