Epidural injection of ketamine for perineal analgesia in the horse.
Abstract: To determine the analgesic, sedative, and cardiopulmonary effects of epidural ketamine in the horse. Methods: Six healthy horses (three males and three females) weighing between 350 and 450 kg. Methods: Three doses of ketamine were selected (0.5, 1, 2 mg/kg). Two months before the beginning of experiments, the carotid artery was exteriorized, and 1 week before experiments began, an epidural catheter was placed percutaneously in all animals with the tip located 12 cm cranially in the midsacrum. One week later, either saline (control) or one of three doses of ketamine was injected epidurally. Each animal received each ketamine dose and saline in random order at 1-week intervals. Ketamine was diluted in saline 0.9% before the experiment, and the volume used was adjusted to horse size and correlated to clinically used volumes. All the animals received a standard noxious stimulus consisting of needle insertion into the skin and deep muscle using a 3-point scale for scoring the response. A second scale was used to score the degree of sedation. The response to a noxious stimulus, the degree of sedation, and arterial blood pressure were assessed at previously determined intervals: before drug and 2, 5, 10, and 15 minutes and every 15 minutes to 210 minutes after ketamine or saline administration. Arterial blood samples were drawn for blood gas analysis before drug and at 15, 30, 60, and 90 minutes. Results: All the tested doses of ketamine were effective in producing analgesia of the tail, perineum, and upper hindlimb. Total tail and perineal analgesia times were similar depending on dosage (30 minutes for 0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg and 75 minutes for 2.0 mg/kg). A sedative effect of ketamine was also observed in a dose-response manner with a peak effect between 15 and 30 minutes postadministration. No cardiopulmonary effects were observed with any dose of ketamine. Conclusions: Results indicate that epidurally administered ketamine in the horse produces local spinal and central nervous system effects with analgesia and sedation but minimal cardiopulmonary effects. Conclusions: Further studies are required to determine whether the analgesia is sufficient for surgery.
Publication Date: 1998-07-15 PubMed ID: 9662784DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-950x.1998.tb00145.xGoogle Scholar: Lookup
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- Clinical Trial
- Journal Article
- Randomized Controlled Trial
Summary
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This research paper investigates the effects of using varying doses of ketamine when administered epidurally in horses, examining its impact on pain relief, sedation, and cardiopulmonary changes.
Research Context and Methodology
- This study was conducted on six healthy horses. This comprised three males and three females, each weighing between 350 to 450 kg.
- Three dosage levels of ketamine were selected: 0.5, 1, and 2 mg/kg.
- Prior to starting the experiments, an epidural catheter was inserted in the animals, and their carotid artery was exteriorized. This process was completed over the course of two months.
- The ketamine (or saline for the control group) was injected epidurally with the volume being adjusted in relation to each horse’s size.
- The assessments were carried out at predetermined intervals: pre-administration, and 2, 5, 10, 15 minutes, etc., up to 210 minutes post-administration.
- Pain response was measured through the application of a standard noxious stimulus (needle insertion), with sedation and arterial blood pressure also being measured. Additionally, arterial blood samples were taken for blood gas analysis at different intervals.
Research Findings
- All doses of ketamine tested were effective in producing analgesia in the tail, perineum, and upper hindlimb of the horses.
- The total time for analgesia in the tail and perineum was 30 minutes for 0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg dosages, and for 75 minutes for the 2.0 mg/kg dose.
- An observable sedative effect was noted in a dose-response manner, reaching a peak between 15 and 30 minutes after administration.
- There were no noticeable cardiopulmonary effects associated with any of the ketamine doses.
Conclusions
- The results indicate that the epidural administration of ketamine in horses produces local anesthetic effects along with sedation, with the nervous system effect being minimal.
- While the study confirms the efficacy of ketamine for breeding analgesia and sedation, it also highlights the need for further research to determine whether the strength of the analgesia is sufficient for surgical procedures.
Cite This Article
APA
Gómez de Segura IA, De Rossi R, Santos M, López San-Roman J, Tendillo FJ, San-Roman F.
(1998).
Epidural injection of ketamine for perineal analgesia in the horse.
Vet Surg, 27(4), 384-391.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-950x.1998.tb00145.x Publication
Researcher Affiliations
- Servicio de Cirugía Experimental; Hospitales Universitarios La Paz, Madrid, Spain.
MeSH Terms
- Analgesia, Epidural / veterinary
- Anesthetics, Dissociative / administration & dosage
- Anesthetics, Dissociative / adverse effects
- Animals
- Ataxia / chemically induced
- Ataxia / veterinary
- Blood Pressure / drug effects
- Cross-Over Studies
- Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
- Female
- Heart Rate / drug effects
- Horses / physiology
- Injections, Epidural / veterinary
- Ketamine / administration & dosage
- Ketamine / adverse effects
- Male
- Perineum
- Pulmonary Gas Exchange / drug effects
- Single-Blind Method
- Tail
- Time Factors
Citations
This article has been cited 8 times.- Song Y, Day CM, Afinjuomo F, Tan JE, Page SW, Garg S. Advanced Strategies of Drug Delivery via Oral, Topical, and Parenteral Administration Routes: Where Do Equine Medications Stand?. Pharmaceutics 2023 Jan 4;15(1).
- Marzok M, Almubarak AI, Babiker H, Kandeel M, El-Hawari SF, El-Khodery S. Comparative evaluation of sedative and anti-nociceptive effects of epidural romifidine, romifidine-lidocaine, and lidocaine in donkeys (Equus asinus). Front Vet Sci 2022;9:966715.
- Marzok M, Almubarak AI, Abdel-Raheem SM, El-Khodery S, Shawaf T, Kandeel M. Comparative Study of the Sedative and Anti-nociceptive Effects of Sacrococcygeal Epidural Administration of Romifidine, Lidocaine, and Romifidine/Lidocaine in the Dromedary Camel. Front Vet Sci 2022;9:891581.
- Du R, Han R, Niu K, Xu J, Zhao Z, Lu G, Shang Y. The Multivariate Effect of Ketamine on PTSD: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Front Psychiatry 2022;13:813103.
- Zanos P, Moaddel R, Morris PJ, Riggs LM, Highland JN, Georgiou P, Pereira EFR, Albuquerque EX, Thomas CJ, Zarate CA Jr, Gould TD. Ketamine and Ketamine Metabolite Pharmacology: Insights into Therapeutic Mechanisms. Pharmacol Rev 2018 Jul;70(3):621-660.
- Kinjavdekar P, Singh GR, Amarpal, Aithal HP, Pawde AM. Clinicophysiological effects of spinally administered ketamine and its combination with xylazine and medetomidine in healthy goats. Vet Res Commun 2007 Oct;31(7):847-61.
- Singh V, Amarpal, Kinjavdekar P, Aithal HP, Pratap K. Medetomidine with ketamine and bupivacaine for epidural analgesia in buffaloes. Vet Res Commun 2005 Jan;29(1):1-18.
- DeRossi R, Sampaio BF, Varela JV, Junqueira AL. Perineal analgesia and hemodynamic effects of the epidural administration of meperidine or hyperbaric bupivacaine in conscious horses. Can Vet J 2004 Jan;45(1):42-7.
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