Detomidine-propofol anesthesia for abdominal surgery in horses.
Abstract: To evaluate propofol for induction and maintenance of anesthesia, after detomidine premedication, in horses undergoing abdominal surgery for creation of an experimental intestinal adhesion model. Methods: Prospective study. Methods: Twelve horses (424 +/- 81 kg) from 1 to 20 years of age (5 females, 7 males). Methods: Horses were premedicated with detomidine (0.015 mg/kg i.v.) 20 to 25 minutes before induction, and a propofol bolus (2 mg/kg i.v.) was administered for induction. Propofol infusion (0.2 mg/kg/min i.v.) was used to maintain anesthesia. The infusion rate was adjusted to maintain an acceptable anesthetic plane as determined by muscle relaxation, occular signs, response to surgery, and cardiopulmonary responses. Oxygen (15 L/min) was insufflated through an endotracheal tube as necessary to maintain the SpO2 greater than 90%. Systolic (SAP), mean (MAP), and diastolic (DAP) arterial pressures, heart rate (HR), electrocardiogram (ECG), respiratory rate (RR), SpO2 (via pulse oximetry), and nasal temperature were recorded at 15 minute intervals, before premedication and after induction of anesthesia. Arterial blood gas samples were collected at the same times. Objective data are reported as mean (+/-SD); subjective data are reported as medians (range). Results: Propofol (2.0 mg/kg i.v.) induced anesthesia (mean bolus time, 85 sec) within 24 sec (+/-22 sec) after the bolus was completed. Induction was good in 10 horses; 2 horses showed signs of excitement and these two inductions were not smooth. Propofol infusion (0.18 mg/kg/min +/- 0.04) was used to maintain anesthesia for 61 +/- 19 minutes with the horses in dorsal recumbency. Mean SAP, DAP, and MAP increased significantly over time from 131 to 148, 89 to 101, and 105 to 121 mm Hg, respectively. Mean HR varied over time from 43 to 45 beats/min, whereas mean RR increased significantly over anesthesia time from 4 to 6 breaths/min. Mean arterial pH decreased from a baseline of 7.41 +/- 0.07 to 7.30 +/- 0.05 at 15 minutes of anesthesia, then increased towards baseline values. Mean PaCO2 values increased during anesthesia, ranging from 47 to 61 mm Hg whereas PaO2 values decreased from baseline (97 +/- 20 mm Hg), ranging from 42 to 57 mm Hg. Muscle relaxation was good and no horses moved during surgery: Recovery was good in 9 horses and acceptable in 3; mean recovery time was 67 +/- 29 minutes with 2.4 +/- 2.4 attempts necessary for the horses to stand. Conclusions: Detomidine-propofol anesthesia in horses in dorsal recumbency was associated with little cardiovascular depression, but hypoxemia and respiratory depression occurred and some excitement was seen on induction. Conclusions: Detomidine-propofol anesthesia is not recommended for surgical procedures in horses if dorsal recumbency is necessary and supplemental oxygen is not available (eg, field anesthesia).
Publication Date: 1999-05-25 PubMed ID: 10338166DOI: 10.1053/jvet.1999.0196Google Scholar: Lookup
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Summary
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The study aimed at assessing the effectiveness of propofol for inducing and maintaining anesthesia in horses post-detomidine premedication for abdominal surgeries. The study also examined the side-effects and disadvantages of the anesthesia protocol.
Research Methodology
- Twelve horses of varying ages and weights (424 +/- 81 kg and ages 1 to 20 years) were used in the study. The group consisted of five females and seven males.
- Horses were pre-treated with detomidine (0.015 mg/kg intravenously) 20 to 25 minutes before induction, followed by administering a propofol bolus (2 mg/kg intravenously) for induction.
- An infusion of propofol at the rate of 0.2 mg/kg/min was used to maintain the anesthesia.
- The infusion rate was adjusted based on muscle relaxation, ocular signs, response to surgery, and cardiopulmonary responses to maintain an acceptable anesthetic plane.
- Oxygen was provided via an endotracheal tube to keep the SpO2 levels above 90%.
- Vital statistics, including arterial pressures (SAP, MAP, and DAP), heart rate (HR), electrocardiogram (ECG), respiratory rate (RR), SpO2, and nasal temperature were recorded at regular 15-minute intervals before and after the induction of anesthesia.
- Arterial blood gas samples were collected at corresponding times for analysis.
Results
- Propofol induced anesthesia within 24 seconds after the completion of the bolus injection, with an average bolus time of 85 seconds.
- The induction process was smooth in 10 horses, while 2 horses showed signs of excitement.
- Propofol infusion was used to maintain anesthesia for about 61 minutes with the horses in dorsal recumbency.
- Significant changes were noticed in SAP, DAP, and MAP, HR and RR over the course of anesthesia.
- The mean arterial pH decreased initially but gradually increased towards baseline values over time.
- PaCO2 values increased during anesthesia, whereas PaO2 values decreased.
- All horses exhibited good muscle relaxation and remained motionless during surgery. Recovery was deemed good in 9 horses and acceptable in the remaining three.
- The mean recovery time was 67 minutes, with an average of 2.4 attempts needed for the horses to stand.
Conclusions
- The use of Detomidine-propofol anesthesia in horses when they are in dorsal recumbency lead to minimal cardiovascular depression, however, respiratory depression and hypoxemia were observed, and some horses showed excitement upon induction.
- This combination of drugs is not recommended for surgical procedures in horses that require dorsal recumbency and where supplemental oxygen is not available, such as in field anesthesia.
Cite This Article
APA
Matthews NS, Hartsfield SM, Hague B, Carroll GL, Short CE.
(1999).
Detomidine-propofol anesthesia for abdominal surgery in horses.
Vet Surg, 28(3), 196-201.
https://doi.org/10.1053/jvet.1999.0196 Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Texas Veterinary Medical Center, Texas A & M University, College Station 77843-4474, USA.
MeSH Terms
- Abdomen / surgery
- Analysis of Variance
- Anesthesia, Intravenous / veterinary
- Anesthetics, Intravenous
- Animals
- Female
- Hemodynamics / drug effects
- Horses / surgery
- Hypnotics and Sedatives / pharmacology
- Imidazoles / pharmacology
- Male
- Preanesthetic Medication / veterinary
- Propofol
- Prospective Studies
Citations
This article has been cited 4 times.- Gozalo-Marcilla M, Ringer SK. Recovery after General Anaesthesia in Adult Horses: A Structured Summary of the Literature. Animals (Basel) 2021 Jun 14;11(6).
- Aoki M, Wakuno A, Kushiro A, Mae N, Kakizaki M, Nagata SI, Ohta M. Evaluation of total intravenous anesthesia with propofol-guaifenesin-medetomidine and alfaxalone-guaifenesin-medetomidine in Thoroughbred horses undergoing castration. J Vet Med Sci 2017 Dec 22;79(12):2011-2018.
- Abdel-Hady AAA, Abdelbasset KM, Soliman AS. Comparative experimental study on two designed intravenous anaesthetic combinations in dogs. EXCLI J 2017;16:770-779.
- Umar MA, Fukui S, Kawase K, Itami T, Yamashita K. Cardiovascular effects of total intravenous anesthesia using ketamine-medetomidine-propofol (KMP-TIVA) in horses undergoing surgery. J Vet Med Sci 2015 Mar;77(3):281-8.
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