Entod Furquin Eye Gel (Moxifloxacin) for Dogs and Cats
Inclusive of all taxes
Product Details
| Product type | Sterile Topical Ophthalmic Drop-Gel (Schedule H Prescription Drug) |
| Volume / Quantity | 5 ml Tube / Bottle |
| Target Species | Canines and Felines (Pets suffering from heavy mucopurulent discharge, swelling, or painful bacterial eye infections) |
| Common Use Case | Clinical management of acute and chronic bacterial conjunctivitis (pink eye); treating superficial bacterial keratitis and corneal abrasions; managing ulcerative blepharitis and eyelid margins; providing long-lasting overnight antibiotic coverage; and protecting the ocular surface as a post-operative preventative after delicate intraocular surgeries. |
FUR by Entod Furquin (5ml) is a prescription-strength, long-acting veterinary ophthalmic antibiotic gel engineered to treat severe and complicated superficial bacterial eye infections in dogs and cats. The advanced, high-viscosity formulation features a potent fourth-generation fluoroquinolone: Moxifloxacin Hydrochloride (0.5% w/v), sterilely prepared in a specialized gel-forming aqueous base.
Moxifloxacin provides rapid, broad-spectrum bactericidal action against a wide array of Gram-positive and Gram-negative ocular pathogens, including tricky organisms like Staphylococcus and Streptococcus species. It works at the cellular level by blocking essential bacterial enzymes (DNA gyrase and topoisomerase IV) required for bacterial DNA replication and transcription.
Unlike standard watery antibiotic drops that drain out of the eye within minutes, Furquin is engineered as a drop-gel. Upon contact with the natural tear film, it forms a clear, viscoelastic, micro-protective matrix over the eye. This significantly increases corneal contact time, ensures sustained delivery of the antibiotic to the ocular tissues, and acts as a soothing physical shield that minimizes blink-friction. In companion animal medicine, Furquin Eye Gel is highly valued for managing acute bacterial conjunctivitis (pink eye), superficial corneal keratitis, blepharitis, and preventing secondary infections following ocular trauma or surgeries.
