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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

BEVA primary care clinical guidelines: Analgesia.

Journal:
Equine veterinary journal
Year:
2020
Authors:
Bowen, I M et al.
Affiliation:
Oakham Veterinary Hospital/University of Nottingham · United Kingdom
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

The guidelines for pain management in horses suggest that when a horse is being castrated, it should receive local anesthesia directly in the testicles, regardless of the method used, and should also be given non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) before the surgery. It’s important to note that medications like butorphanol and buprenorphine should not be used alone for pain relief in these cases. After the surgery, the horse should continue to receive pain relief for three days. For hoof pain or laminitis, phenylbutazone is more effective than meloxicam or firocoxib, but there's no clear evidence that any of these medications work better for joint pain. In cases of colic, flunixin and firocoxib are more effective than meloxicam or phenylbutazone. Overall, these medications should only be given under the supervision of a veterinarian who can monitor for any potential side effects.

Abstract

Primary care guidelines provide a reference point to guide clinicians based on a systematic review of the literature, contextualised by expert clinical opinion. These guidelines develop a modification of the GRADE framework for assessment of research evidence (vetGRADE) and applied this to a range of clinical scenarios regarding use of analgesic agents. Key guidelines produced by the panel included recommendations that horses undergoing routine castration should receive intratesticular local anaesthesia irrespective of methods adopted and that horses should receive NSAIDs prior to surgery (overall certainty levels high). Butorphanol and buprenorphine should not be considered appropriate as sole analgesic for such procedures (high certainty). The panel recommend the continuation of analgesia for 3 days following castration (moderate certainty) and conclude that phenylbutazone provided superior analgesia to meloxicam and firocoxib for hoof pain/laminitis (moderate certainty), but that enhanced efficacy has not been demonstrated for joint pain. In horses with colic, flunixin and firocoxib are considered to provide more effective analgesia than meloxicam or phenylbutazone (moderate certainty). Given the risk of adverse events of all classes of analgesic, these agents should be used only under the control of a veterinary surgeon who has fully evaluated a horse and developed a therapeutic, analgesic plan that includes ongoing monitoring for such adverse events such as the development of right dorsal colitis with all classes of NSAID and spontaneous locomotor activity and potentially ileus with opiates. Finally, the panel call for the development of a single properly validated composite pain score for horses to allow accurate comparisons between medications in a robust manner.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31657050/