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Title: Use of a breath test to determine the fate of swallowed fluids in cattle. Author: McLeay LM, Carruthers VR, Neil PG. Journal: Am J Vet Res; 1997 Nov; 58(11):1314-9. PubMed ID: 9361898. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To investigate a [13C]octanoic acid breath test as a means of detecting reticular groove contraction in cattle. ANIMALS: 19 adult dairy cows with fistulated rumen, 10 yearling bulls, and 6 yearling steers. PROCEDURE: Cows were given 200 mg of [13C]octanoic acid in the caudal portion of the rumen, reticulum, or omasum/abomasum through the reticulo-omasal orifice, or were given the same dose of label with a drench of water or sodium bicarbonate. Collected breath was analyzed for 13C in CO2 for up to 3 hours. Breath of yearlings was analyzed for 13C in CO2 over 20 minutes after drenching with 200 mg of [13C]octanoic acid with water or sodium chloride and after sucking 200 mg of [13C]octanoic acid with molasses and water. RESULTS: In cows, enrichment of 13C in breath CO2 peaked at 20 to 30 minutes after placement of [13C]octanoic acid through the orifice, compared with a lower peak at 60 and 90 minutes after placement in the reticulum and rumen, respectively. The maximal increase in enrichment after placement of [13C]octanoic acid in the reticulum did not overlap with the minimal increase when placed through the reticulo-omasal orifice. Enrichment values in cows after drenching were consistent with values obtained after direct placement of [13C]octanoic acid. In yearlings, the inclusion of sodium chloride in the drench greatly increased enrichment, compared with water, but enrichment was greatest after sucking of the molasses, water, and [13C]octanoic acid combination. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: This breath test provides a simple, repeatable, nonradioactive, and noninvasive means of detecting the fate of swallowed fluids in cattle, thus revealing the route taken of orally administered therapeutic agents or nutrients.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]