Freddy
Well-known member
WE use BAYTRIL strictly for respiratory problems with very good sucess ,we try not to use Nuflor on baby calves ,seems to be hard on their stomachs ....
Freddy said:WE use BAYTRIL strictly for respiratory problems with very good sucess ,we try not to use Nuflor on baby calves ,seems to be hard on their stomachs ....
braunranch said:Freddy said:WE use BAYTRIL strictly for respiratory problems with very good sucess ,we try not to use Nuflor on baby calves ,seems to be hard on their stomachs ....
An earlier post mentioned killing a calf with it by accidently hitting a vein, i doubt a vein was hit its a SQ DRUG, so i'm not sure how you'd hit a vein. It was more likely an allergic reaction to the drug or more likely the carrier. I've killed calves with LA from this, saved calves that we're flat out foaming at the mouth from 7 way(blackleg vaccine) with a shot of dex. Any drug or vaccine can cause a reaction.
HGC said:DL, Its been a couple of years since I switched from Nuflor to Nuflor Gold, but I thought my vet said that they put something in Nuflor Gold to extend the half life and make it stay in their system longer, and therefore it should be more effective. Is that correct? Is it worth paying the premium for Nuflor Gold?
Thanks
bpwagner115 said:Interesting post. We just had this conversation with our vet this week as we are weaning our calves. I had always heard that Draxxin was the BEST but our vet said that he preferred to use Draxxin only as a precautionary because it lasts much longer than Micotil and Nuflor, however is slower to take action. He said for calves that are already sick, Nuflor (Resflor) and Micotil are better options because they begin working within hours and Draxxin can take a day or longer before you see improvement. I also found the comment about Micotil hitting a blood vessel intersting as we have used Micotil a number of times already this fall. Whenever I have seen vet's give the injection of Micotil it has been given under the skin overing the ribs, not in the neck. Is it possible that is to avoid injecting into blood vessel(s)? I would guess that is the reason.
bpwagner115 said:I really have nothing to back up my statements, it was just a conversation had between the vet and myself. I did find this research study interesting....
http://www.nuflorgold.com/product/NuflorGoldVsDraxxin.aspx
DL said:bpwagner115 said:Interesting post. We just had this conversation with our vet this week as we are weaning our calves. I had always heard that Draxxin was the BEST but our vet said that he preferred to use Draxxin only as a precautionary because it lasts much longer than Micotil and Nuflor, however is slower to take action. He said for calves that are already sick, Nuflor (Resflor) and Micotil are better options because they begin working within hours and Draxxin can take a day or longer before you see improvement. I also found the comment about Micotil hitting a blood vessel intersting as we have used Micotil a number of times already this fall. Whenever I have seen vet's give the injection of Micotil it has been given under the skin overing the ribs, not in the neck. Is it possible that is to avoid injecting into blood vessel(s)? I would guess that is the reason.
Not entirely sure that is true - peak plasma concentrations of Draxxin are seen generally 15 minutes after administration and therapeutic levels of Nuflor occur within 30 min - so basically they both start acting quickly - the longer duration of action of Draxxin is related to the large volume of distribution (ie it goes basically everywhere) - half life in plasma is 2.8 days while in lung it is 8.8 days - meaning that the concentration of drug in the lung sufficient to work on the bugs is long.
BTW you may already know but Resflor is Nuflor (florfenicol) and Banamine (flunixin) not just Nuflor. Nuflor Gold is florfenicol with a different carrier than Nuflor.
rf21970 said:Some of the differences of opinions by vets and producers comes from our different backgrounds. In backgrounding operations that deal with "high risk" (co mingled, sale barn, high stress) calves-most receiving regimens include a preventive antibiotic. Most, including myself, think this is where Draxxin really shines. As a treatment, it has not been that effective for us and most of the other operations our vet consults with. I haven't seen data on it, as most studies for the newest drugs are in backgrounding and feedlot scenarios because they are the operations that use the lion's share of these drugs, but I'm sure all of the drugs covered in this thread are very effective in the treatment of BRD in a cow/calf weaned calf scenario. These calves (as a group) tend to be less stressed and have better immune systems which puts them in a better position to respond to the drug you and your vet decide to use.