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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Pain relief after eye removal surgery in dogs using ropivacaine sponge

By Shilo-Benjamini, Yael et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2019·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Analgesic effects of intraorbital insertion of an absorbable gelatin hemostatic sponge soaked with 1% ropivacaine solution following enucleation in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 20 dogs undergoing eye removal surgery (enucleation) received either a special sponge soaked in a pain-relieving medication (ropivacaine) or a saline solution to see which helped with pain afterward. The dogs that got the ropivacaine-soaked sponge had significantly lower pain scores right after surgery and on the first day at home compared to those that only received saline. Fewer dogs in the ropivacaine group needed extra pain relief medication, and there were no complications reported in either group. This treatment appears to help manage pain effectively after eye surgery in dogs.

People also search for: dog eye surgery pain relief · enucleation recovery for dogs · ropivacaine for dogs pain management

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate analgesic effects and complications associated with intraorbital insertion of an absorbable gelatin hemostatic sponge (AGHS) soaked with 1% ropivacaine solution following enucleation in dogs. ANIMALS: 20 client-owned dogs undergoing enucleation. PROCEDURES: Dogs were randomly assigned to receive an AGHS soaked with 1% ropivacaine solution (n = 10) or saline (0.9% NaCl) solution (control group; 10) inserted intraorbitally prior to skin closure following enucleation. Carprofen (2 mg/kg [0.9 mg/lb]) was administered SC once after orotracheal extubation and then PO twice a day for 5 days. During the postoperative recovery period, apparent pain level was scored at various points with a modified short-form Glasgow Composite Pain Scale (score range, 0 to 19), and methadone was administered for rescue analgesia if any score was ≥ 5. After dogs returned home, owners recorded their behavior and apparent pain level for the first 3 days following enucleation. RESULTS: At extubation, the median (range) pain score was significantly higher in the control group (8 [2 to 14]) versus the ropivacaine group (3 [1 to 7]). A greater proportion of dogs in the control group received methadone (7/10 vs 1/10) and had crying or attention-seeking behavior on the first day following enucleation (7/10 vs 1/10). No complications were observed in either group. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Addition of intraorbital insertion of a ropivacaine-soaked AGHS to the analgesic protocol for dogs undergoing enucleation provided better analgesia than was achieved without this treatment as measured immediately and the first day after surgery, with no noted adverse effects.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31730436/