selamectin has been researched along with doramectin* in 3 studies
1 trial(s) available for selamectin and doramectin
Article | Year |
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Selamectin - a novel endectocide for dogs and cats.
Topics: Animals; Anthelmintics; Antiparasitic Agents; Cat Diseases; Cats; Dirofilaria immitis; Dirofilariasis; Dog Diseases; Dogs; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; Ectoparasitic Infestations; Female; Ivermectin; Male; Mice; Models, Chemical; Siphonaptera; Tick Infestations | 2000 |
2 other study(ies) available for selamectin and doramectin
Article | Year |
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The acute effects of single-dose orally administered doramectin, eprinomectin and selamectin on natural infections of Syphacia muris in rats.
This study was designed to determine the acute effects of a single-dose of orally administered doramectin, eprinomectin and selamectin on Syphacia muris infection in rats. Rats, naturally infected with S. muris, were divided into four groups: three different treatment groups (n=7) and one positive control (n=7). Cellophane tape preparations were obtained from the treated rats on day 0 pre-treatment and on days 2, 4 and 6 post-treatment. Syphacia sp. eggs were counted. Eprinomectin was found to be 100% effective in eliminating eggs on two post-treatment. However when egg counts on day 6 post-treatment were compared with pre-treatment egg counts, doramectin and selamectin were found to be 99.32 and 98.77% effective in eliminating eggs, respectively. On day 7 post-treatment, blood samples were obtained from all groups, and then the rats were necropsied. Doramectin, eprinomectin and selamectin were found to be 100% effective in eliminating adult S. muris, when compared with the positive control group. Topics: Administration, Oral; Animals; Animals, Laboratory; Anthelmintics; Hematologic Tests; Ivermectin; Male; Oxyuriasis; Oxyuroidea; Parasite Egg Count; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Rodent Diseases | 2009 |
Comparison of ivermectin, doramectin, selamectin, and eleven intermediates in a nematode larval development assay.
Chemical substitutions at pharmacologically relevant sites such as C-5, C-13, C-22,23, and C-25 were examined in ivermectin, doramectin, selamectin, and a series of 11 other intermediates using a larval development assay with Haemonchus contortus. A range of activities spanning 5 orders of magnitude were manifest with small changes in the substituents to the 14 avermectins. Within this compound series, there was no major potency advantage or disadvantage to a disaccharide over a monosaccharide substituent at C-13. Ivermectin and doramectin were each fully effective at a concentration of 0.001 microg/ml, and both were similar to their respective monosaccharide homologs. Specific patterns emerged among the analogs with substituents at C-5. Analogs possessing hydroxyl groups at C-5 were superior in activity by several orders of magnitude over those with oxo substituents. Replacement of the oxo with an oxime (NOH) restored activity to some degree but did not restore it to the level of those possessing the hydroxyl substituent. Consequently, ivermectin and doramectin that possess hydroxyl moieties at C-5 were superior against H. contortus to those like selamectin that have oxime substituents. There was no advantage for analogs with a single or double bond at C-22,23 within the cyclohexyl series, and these analogs had equivalent activity as those with a single bond at C-22,23 in the sec-butyl/isopropyl series. However, there was superior activity for the analog series that possessed the combination of a double-bond at C-22,23 and a sec-butyl/isopropyl substituent at C-25. As a result, the most potent compound in this test was not any of the 3 commercialized avermectins but was a monosaccharide with a double bond at C-22,23, an hydroxyl at C-5, and a sec-butyl/isopropyl moiety at C-25. Topics: Animals; Antinematodal Agents; Haemonchus; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Ivermectin; Larva; Structure-Activity Relationship | 2001 |