29. Drugs against ectoparasites (except macrocyclic lactones) 1. (organophosphates, carbamates, pyrethroids, amitraz) Flashcards
Ectoparasiticids. Drug list (organophosphates, carbamates, pyrethroids, amitraz)
Organophospates:
- Diazinon
- Coumaphos
- Phoxim
Carbamates:
- Propoxur
Pyrethroids:
- Permethrin
- Deltamethrin
- Flumethrin
- Tetramethrin
Amitraz
Damage caused by ectoparasites:
- causing stress
- anaemia (blood sucking)
- wounds, tissue injuries -> serious infections, myasis
- vectors and intermediate hosts of viral, bacerial and parasitic diseases
Role of vectors and intermediate hosts
- fleas -> Dipylidium caninum (cucumber seed like tapeworm of dog
- ticks -> Ixodes - Lyme disease, Dermacentor -> babesiosis, anaplasmosis, Rhipicephalus -> ehrlichiosis
- mosquitos -> dirofilariasis (heart worm disease)
- sand fly -> leishmaniasis
Classification of ectoparasiticides
- adulticides - neurotoxins (target is the nervous syste of the parasite). Can be contact poisons or systemic agents (must be digested by parasite, e.g. by sucking blood with drug)
- insect growth regulators - acting only on parasites with metamorphosis. Will not kill the parasite but stop their development
- repellents - drugs that keep parasites away
Explain selective toxicity of ectoparasiticides
PK:
- metabolism in mammals is much faster than in parasites
- BBB -> prevention of CNS signs (but careful with MDR1 mutation)
- slow absorption -> less toxicity
PD:
- e.g. GLuCl channels (depolarization or hyperpolarization) - not present in warm-blooded animals
- nACh receptor sensitivity (similar target, affinity to parasitic receptors is much higher than to our patients’)
Dermal absorption of ectoparacidals
- usually ectoparasiticides are large, lipophilic molecules
- slow but good absorption -> low plasma conc -> low toxicity for patient
- poor to moderate amount of the drug crosses BBB
- duration of action: collars - 4-8 months (least toxic); spray, bathing - days; spot on - 4-12 weeks (can be most toxic because absorption is the fastest -> plasma conc is high)
Organophosphates. Drugs
- Diazinon (=dimpylate in USA) - mostly for sheep dipping
- Coumaphos - mites
- Phoxim - mites
Organophosphates. PK
- good lipophilicity
- sensitive to alkaline pH
- good absorption: oral 35% (considered bad for oral), dermal 2-14% (considered good for dermal)
- excellent distribution (special barriers, BBB)
- metabolism - partial activation - makes subsctance more active and more toxic (much longer half-life)
- excretion: 80% urine, 20% feces
- cats are very sensitive! forbidden in cats!
Organophosphates. Mechanism of action
- contact poisons
- irreversible inhibition of AChE -> organophosphates toxicosis = ACh toxicosis
- first muscarinic ACh receptors are affected, then nicotinic, then CNS
- antidote - pralidoxim. Enzyme reactivation. Pralodoxime higher affinity to the binding site of AChE than organophososphates - but only can work as antidote within 1 day because of aging of binding and it can’t be reversed anymore)
Organophosphates. SE
Muscarinic ACh receptors:
- SLUDGE - salivation, lacrimation, urination, diarrhea, GI pain, emesis
- also bronchoconstriction, bradycardia, miosis
- can be reversed with atropin
Nicotinic ACh receptors:
- muscle tremors, spasms
- hyperthermia, brain oedema
- atropin won’t be effective here
- anticonvulsives needed, cooling down the animal
CNS:
- seizures, coma, death
- uncounciousness with miosis
Organophosphates. Usage
Diazinon
- broad spectrum in ost species. Fleas, ticks, lice, mites, myasis
- mostly for dipping (sheep)
Coumaphos
- varroosis of honey bees (sucks haemolyph of bees)
Carbamates
- Propoxur - only in SAM
- reversible
- much safer than organophosphates
- less lipophilic than organophosphates
- fleas, ticks
- collars, aerosol sprays, shampoos
Pyrethroids. Drugs
- PERmethrin
- DELTAmethrin
- FLUmethrin (Foresto)
- TETRAmethrin - 1st gen, cheaper but more toxic
Pyrethroids. Mechanism of action
- opening of Na+ channels -> constant depolarization -> “knock-down effect”, “hot-feet effect”
- contact poison + repellent
Pyrethroids. Usage
- ticks: still ok (Rhipocephalus is not that affected)
- fleas: resistance is common
- poor efficacy against mange mites
- fly control
- moderate efficacy against varroa mites (resistance!) (photo)
- combination with macrocyclic lacones
- usually not used in cats but but collar (Foresto) can be used for cats