Omeprazole--Over the counter

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wildhorses

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My horse has been on gastrogard for a couple of weeks as a precaution due to the need for daily banamine for an injury. I ran out of the Gastrogard from the vet. So I picked up some Omeprazole at Walmart (the generic walmart brend tablets). I am wondering what the dosage would be?

The tablets are 20 mg tablets that I purchased. The gastrogard tube says to administere 4mg Omeprazole per KG of body weight. For my 250 pound horse, that would equal 22 tablets per day??? This can't be right? I really need some help and advice as I know the math is correct. Thanks in advance.
 
Yes.. doing the math....it's correct. 250lbs/2.2kg/lb = 113.6 kg so 113.6kg *4mg = 454.4mg per 113kg and the tables are 20mg each.. so take 113kg/20mg tabs = 22 tablets. You did the math correctly. At least that is the same answer I got.
 
Research from Texas A&M University shows that feeding alfalfa to horses with the potential to be high performers either prevents or is therapeutic in treating stomach ulcers. Something in alfalfa hay tends to buffer acid production, said Dr. Pete Gibbs, Extension horse specialist. Feeding grain, confinement, exercise and overall environmental stress factors are thought to cause ulcers, he said. Studies have shown that horses will heal if provided less acidic diets. In the research, 24 quarter horses from 12-16 months old were separated into two treatment groups. One group was fed Bermuda grass hay and the other fed alfalfa hay to meet the daily roughage needs. The yearlings received forced exercise during the study. The horses were examined internally with an endoscope at the beginning and end of two 28-day trials. It's commonly thought that horses turned out on pastures are better off than those that are confined. However, if grass hay is the only hay they are fed, horses can still get gastric ulcers, he said. In this study, ulcer scores increased when alfalfa was removed from the horses diets, and they were turned out on pasture. Under the ulcer-scoring system, 0 signified no ulcers, with severity increasing to level 4. Further work is needed to look at horses with varying degrees of ulceration to better determine the full extent to which alfalfa or alfalfa-based products might help from a feeding management standpoint. Based on what we know right now, for horses that are kept in confinement, eating feed and getting forced exercise, it makes sense to consider some alfalfa as part of their diet, he said. Until further research is done, he recommends, horses weighing between 1,000-1,300 pounds should be fed about 1 pound of alfalfa after a grain meal.

So your little one would get 1/4 lb daily. My vet does recommend using alfalfa since gastro guard can be so costly. It's such a small amount. I use the tnt chopped alfalfa soaked in water.
 
I think it's the high levels of Calcium in the alfalfa that does the trick...

Andrea
 
Some past information I had read said that human Omeprazole tablets did not dissolve in the correct place in a horse's GI tract for the drug to work properly. The horse paste Omeprazole is supposed to be formulated to overcome that problem.

Is this information still valid?

Charlotte
 
<H3 class=Body>[SIZE=10pt]UlcerGard is omeprazole, which is given at a concentration of 0.45 mg/lb of body weight (1 mg per kg). This usually equals about a quarter of a tube a day. Omeprazole at higher doses will treat ulcers. For example, ulcers are treated with omeprazole at 4 mg/kg, which is the concentration of GastroGard (Rx). Thus, ulcer treatment is the same as ulcer prevention, but at 4 times the dose.[/SIZE] </H3><H2 class=Body>[SIZE=10pt]Sucralfate (Rx) or carafate to prevent horse ulcers[/SIZE]</H2>Sucralfate (Rx) is used for preventing ulcers in foals at the dose of 5-10 mg/lb (10-20 mg/kg) 3-4 times a day.

I think Charlotte is right though...was doing some research on the topic and they say the otc version is a delayed release and doesn't digest or the rate of absorption isn't the same for humans vs. equine. I will try and find the link again.

I have had good success with the alfalfa for my little ones. (and big one too)
 
Hi

I just found a site that carries omeprazole for horses in tablet and granular from, has coating so it will work in the intestines. Check out

here is the site omeprazole direct

I am going to talk to my vet about this ...JANE
 

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