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Brett A. Sponseller

University of Kentucky

ORCID: 0000-0001-7160-263X

Publishes on Veterinary Equine Medical Research, Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research, Gut microbiota and health. 52 papers and 622 citations.

52Publications
622Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Baseline plasma cortisol and ACTH concentrations and response to low-dose ACTH stimulation testing in ill foals
David M. Wong, Dai Tan Vo, Cody J. Alcott et al.|Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association|2009
Cited by 35

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate baseline plasma cortisol and ACTH concentrations and responses to low-dose ACTH stimulation testing in ill foals. DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. ANIMALS: 58 ill foals. PROCEDURES: Baseline cortisol and ACTH concentrations and cortisol concentrations after administration of a low dose of cosyntropin were determined within 6 hours after admission. Foals were assigned to 4 groups on the basis of age (<or=24 hours vs 1 to 56 days) and presence of septicemia (yes vs no). Values were compared among groups and with values previously reported for healthy foals. RESULTS: Plasma cortisol concentrations 30 and 60 minutes after cosyntropin administration in foals<or=24 hours old were significantly higher than corresponding cortisol concentrations in older foals. In all 4 groups, plasma cortisol concentration 30 minutes after cosyntropin administration was significantly higher than baseline cortisol concentration or concentration 60 minutes after cosyntropin administration. No differences in baseline cortisol or ACTH concentration or in the ACTH-to-cortisol ratio were detected between groups or when ill foals were compared with healthy foals. A small number of ill foals had low baseline cortisol and ACTH concentrations or low responses to cosyntropin administration, compared with healthy foals. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results indicated that most ill foals in the present study population had adequate responses to cosyntropin administration. However, a small subset of ill foals appeared to have dysfunction of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis.