Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Treating self-inflicted wing wounds from nerve pain in a prairie
By Shaver, Stephanie L et al.·Published in Journal of avian medicine and surgery·2009·College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: A multimodal approach to management of suspected neuropathic pain in a prairie falcon (Falco mexicanus).
- Species:
- bird
Plain-English summary
A male prairie falcon was brought in for treatment after developing self-inflicted wounds on its wing about a month after breaking its wing bone. Despite initial treatments with pain medications and laser therapy, the falcon continued to harm itself. After adjusting the pain management plan and using a nerve block, the falcon showed significant improvement. After a total of 181 days in care, the wounds healed completely, and the falcon was successfully returned to the wild.
People also search for: prairie falcon self-inflicted wounds · bird pain management · falcon rehabilitation techniques
Abstract
An adult male prairie falcon (Falco mexicanus) was presented for evaluation and treatment of self-inflicted wounds along the right proximal patagium. The bird had started self-traumatizing approximately 1 month after fracturing the right metacarpus, although the fracture had stabilized, surface wounds had healed completely, and treatment with a nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug had been administered. The bird was treated with gabapentin (11 mg/kg p.o. q12h), ketamine (0.5 mg/kg i.m. q24h), and low level laser therapy (LLLT) (<5 mW, 630-680 nm, 5-second application per site) for 3 weeks, but, despite initial improvement, new self-inflicted wounds appeared at the same site. Approximately 1.5 months later, a radial and medianoulnar nerve block was performed by using bupivacaine (2 mg/kg) and medetomidine (0.5 microg/kg). In addition, the dosing interval of ketamine was increased to q12h, and the dose of gabapentin was increased 7.5-fold. A higher energy and wavelength of LLLT (1040 mW, 830 nm, 2 J/cm2) was applied once to the injured region and fracture site, then the original LLLT protocol was applied once daily. After 2.5 months, the wounds healed completely and no further mutilation took place. Once deemed ready for release, the falcon was returned to the wild after 181 days in captivity. This is the first reported application of successful multimodal analgesia in a raptor with uncontrolled neuropathic pain.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19999765/