PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Supratemporal retrobulbar eye block tested in cats for eye surgery

By Lardone, Elena et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Department of Veterinary Science, Italy·View original on PubMed

PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →

Original publication title: Blind supratemporal retrobulbar block in cats: a feasibility cadaveric study and its efficacy in a group of subjects undergoing corneal or intraocular surgery.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats undergoing eye surgery were given a new type of anesthesia called a modified supratemporal retrobulbar block to see if it would help them recover better. The procedure was quick and showed a high success rate in delivering the anesthetic. Cats that received this block needed fewer additional medications during surgery and had a smoother recovery compared to those who did not. This technique could be beneficial for cats needing corneal or intraocular surgery, making their experience less stressful and more comfortable.

People also search for: cat eye surgery recovery · cat anesthesia options · corneal surgery in cats · eye rubbing after cat surgery

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The supratemporal retrobulbar block (RB) has not been comprehensively described in cats. MATERIALS AND METHODS: : a modified supratemporal retrobulbar injection of 0.1 ml/kg of iomeprole and saline (1:3) was executed using a Tuohy needle in recently deceased cats. Cadavers underwent computed tomography before and following injections. Injectate distribution within the intraconal space was evaluated. Extraconal injections were considered a failure.: cats undergoing corneal/intraocular surgery were included. After intramuscular premedication with methadone 0.3 mg/kg, dexmedetomidine 3 mcg/kg and alfaxalone 2 mg/kg and induction with intravenous (IV) alfaxalone to effect, isoflurane anesthesia was maintained with a target end-expired fraction of 1.1%. Cats were randomly allocated in the retrobulbar group [RG, receiving a modified supratemporal RB with 0.1 ml/kg of a mixture of 2% lidocaine (5.5 ml) and 0.75% ropivacaine (2 ml)] or control group (CG). When heart rate or mean arterial pressure increased above 20% of the pre-incisional values, fentanyl (1 mcg/kg IV) was administered. Alfaxalone (0.5 mg/kg IV) was injected when anesthesia was deemed too light. After a total of 3 interventions regardless the type of drugs (fentanyl/alfaxalone), a constant rate infusion of fentanyl (5 mcg/kg/h IV) was started. Anesthetist interventions, quality of recovery (blindly assessed using a descriptive score scale), postoperative eye rubbing, complications were studied. RESULTS: In the cadaveric study 8 eyes were included (success rate = 87%). The contrast agent spread was scored "moderate-to-large" or "large" in 85.7% of cases and a median 360° (180-360) distribution around the optic nerve was reported. In the clinical study 12 cats were included (6 in RG, 6 in CG). The median time to perform the RB was 35 s (20-50). Only the controls required anesthetist interventions [total amount of 6 (= 0.0276): fentanyl (3/6) and alfaxalone (2/6)]. The RG had a significantly better recovery score (= 0.0012) than CG. Only controls showed eye rubbing (3/6). CONCLUSIONS: The modified supratemporal RB is an achievable and rapidly performed technique. In this study it reduced intraoperative drug administration and improved recovery quality in cats undergoing corneal or intraocular surgery.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39649681/