Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Dog with severe pain treated with injected liposomal CBD for relief
By Shilo-Benjamini, Yael et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2022·Department of Biochemistry·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A Case Report of Subcutaneously Injected Liposomal Cannabidiol Formulation Used as a Compassion Therapy for Pain Management in a Dog.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A 14-year-old mixed breed dog was brought in for severe pain management due to multiple health issues, including cancer, arthritis, and neck pain. The vet treated the dog with a combination of pain medications and a new injectable form of cannabidiol (CBD). After the first CBD injection, the dog showed improvement in pain levels and activity for about three weeks. Unfortunately, the dog later passed away due to heat stroke and a serious neck injury, which were not related to the CBD treatment. The study suggests that CBD could be a helpful option for managing pain in dogs when used alongside other treatments.
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Abstract
A 14-year-old intact mixed breed dog (26 kg) was submitted for a novel cannabidiol (CBD) analgesic treatment. The dog was cachectic and had a testicular neoplasia, hip and elbow osteoarthritis and severe cervical pain. Analgesic treatment included canine osteoarthritic supplement, robencoxib and gabapentin. An additional liposomal CBD injectable formulation at 5 mg/kg was administered subcutaneously between the shoulder blades. The dog was monitored using an activity monitoring collar (PetPace), owner wellbeing questionnaire (Canine Brief Pain Inventory; CBPI), pain interactive visual analog scale (iVAS), blood work and CBD plasma concentrations. A week from the injection and up to 3 weeks afterwards the dog had improved CBPI and iVAS pain scores, and increased collar activity scores. CBD was quantified in plasma for 28 days. Due to disease progression, further difficulty to rise and walk, and relapse to pain after 3 weeks, the owners requested a second liposomal CBD injection, which was performed 4 weeks following the first injection using 3 mg/kg dose. Two days later, the dog was found dead in the yard under direct sun, while environmental temperature was 37°C. Major findings on necropsy revealed evidence of heat stroke and severe cervical disc protrusion with spinal hematoma, none related to liposomal CBD. In conclusion, subcutaneous liposomal CBD produced quantifiable CBD plasma concentrations for 28 days and may be an effective additional treatment as part of multimodal pain management in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35573415/