Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Pain relief after spay surgery in cats using bupivacaine injection
By Benito, Javier et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2016·1 Department of Clinical Sciences, Canada·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Analgesic efficacy of intraperitoneal administration of bupivacaine in cats.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of 45 cats undergoing spay surgery (ovariohysterectomy) received either a local pain relief injection of bupivacaine or a saline solution to see which worked better for managing pain afterward. The cats that got bupivacaine needed less additional pain medication compared to those who received saline, indicating that the bupivacaine was effective in reducing pain. Both treatments provided similar pain relief, but the bupivacaine group showed a significant reduction in the need for extra pain relief. Overall, bupivacaine injections can help manage pain in cats after surgery.
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Abstract
Objectives The aim of this study was to evaluate the analgesic efficacy of intraperitoneal (IP) bupivacaine in cats undergoing ovariohysterectomy (OVH). Methods Forty-five cats were included in a randomized, prospective, blinded study after owners' written consent was obtained. The anesthetic protocol included acepromazine-buprenorphine-propofol-isoflurane. A ventral midline incision was made and cats (n = 15/group) were administered either IP saline 0.9% (negative and positive control groups; NG and PG, respectively) or IP bupivacaine (2 mg/kg; bupivacaine group; BG). Cats in the PG received meloxicam (0.2 mg/kg SC). An OVH was performed and postoperative pain was evaluated using a dynamic interactive visual analog scale (DIVAS), the UNESP-Botucatu multidimensional composite pain scale (MCPS) and mechanical nociceptive thresholds (MNT) for up to 8 h after the end of surgery. Postoperative sedation was evaluated using DIVAS. Rescue analgesia was provided with buprenorphine and/or meloxicam. Repeated measures linear models and a Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel test were used for statistical analysis ( P <0.05). Results There was a significant effect of treatment on the number of times rescue analgesia was administered ( P = 0.002) (PG, n = 2, 13%; NG, n = 12, 80%; BG, n = 4, 27%) with the number of rescues being higher in the NG group than in the PG ( P = 0.0004) and BG ( P = 0.02) groups. The DIVAS, MCPS and MNT were significantly different when compared with baseline values at different time points; however, data were not significantly different among groups. Conclusions and relevance Treatments PG and BG produced similar analgesia in terms of pain scores, number of times rescue analgesia was administered and MNT. Based on rescue analgesia, IP administration of bupivacaine provides analgesia in cats after OVH.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26467541/