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Bull in pain
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<blockquote data-quote="Buck Randall" data-source="post: 1668181" data-attributes="member: 38590"><p>Jumping in late because I missed this conversation earlier. When Banamine was first released for cattle, it was labeled for IM or IV administration. They ended up with too many cases of clostridial myositis (blackleg) at the IM injection sites, and had to change the label or pull the product from the market. SQ is safer than IM (as you see with Resflor), but if they put that on the label they would have to significantly extend the withholding times to account for slower absorption. That's a big negative when trying to sell product to dairy producers in particular.</p><p></p><p>Florfenicol already has a long withhold and isn't allowed for use in dairy cows, so there was no issue with making Resflor a SQ product with long withhold times.</p><p></p><p>So, yes, the rules/laws are a little bit odd, but they do at least have some reasoning behind them in this case.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buck Randall, post: 1668181, member: 38590"] Jumping in late because I missed this conversation earlier. When Banamine was first released for cattle, it was labeled for IM or IV administration. They ended up with too many cases of clostridial myositis (blackleg) at the IM injection sites, and had to change the label or pull the product from the market. SQ is safer than IM (as you see with Resflor), but if they put that on the label they would have to significantly extend the withholding times to account for slower absorption. That's a big negative when trying to sell product to dairy producers in particular. Florfenicol already has a long withhold and isn't allowed for use in dairy cows, so there was no issue with making Resflor a SQ product with long withhold times. So, yes, the rules/laws are a little bit odd, but they do at least have some reasoning behind them in this case. [/QUOTE]
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