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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Heart function during blood loss anesthesia in greyhounds

By Raisis, Anthea L et al.·Published in Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia·2015·College Of Veterinary Medicine, Australia·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Cardiovascular function during maintenance of anaesthesia with isoflurane or alfaxalone infusion in greyhounds experiencing blood loss.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 24 greyhounds undergoing surgery experienced blood loss while under anesthesia, and researchers wanted to see if using isoflurane (a gas) or alfaxalone (an injectable) made a difference in their oxygen delivery and shock levels. Both anesthesia methods led to similar decreases in blood pressure and oxygen delivery, indicating that neither option was better than the other for these dogs in this situation. The study concluded that veterinarians can use either anesthetic without worrying about one being more effective than the other when managing blood loss during surgery.

People also search for: greyhound anesthesia options · isoflurane vs alfaxalone for dogs · dog blood loss during surgery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare adequacy of oxygen delivery and severity of shock during maintenance of anaesthesia with isoflurane or alfaxalone infusion in greyhounds experiencing blood loss. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective, randomised study. ANIMALS: Twenty-four greyhounds (ASA I). METHODS: All greyhounds were premedicated with methadone (0.2 mg kg(-1) ) intramuscularly. Anaesthesia was induced with alfaxalone 2.5 mg kg(-1) intravenously. Following endotracheal intubation, the dogs were connected to an anaesthetic circle circuit delivering oxygen. Dogs were allocated to receive inhaled isoflurane or an intravenous infusion of alfaxalone for maintenance of anaesthesia. Isoflurane was initially administered to achieve an end-tidal concentration of 1.4% and alfaxalone was initially administered at 0.13 mg kg(-1)  minute(-1) . The dose of isoflurane or alfaxalone was adjusted during instrumentation to produce a clinically equivalent depth of anaesthesia. All dogs were mechanically ventilated to normocapnia (Pa CO2 35-40 mmHg; 4.67-5.33 kPa). Passive warming maintained core body temperature between 37 and 38 °C. Measured and calculated indices of cardiovascular function, including mean arterial blood pressure (MAP), cardiac index (CI), systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI), oxygen delivery index (D˙O2I), oxygen consumption index (V˙O2I) and oxygen extraction ratio (OER), were determined at baseline (60 minutes after start of anaesthesia) and after removal of 32 mL kg(-1) and 48 mL kg(-1) of blood. RESULTS: In all dogs, blood loss resulted in a significant decrease in MAP, CI, D˙O2 , and a significant increase in SVRI, V˙O2I , and OER. The changes in each of the indices did not differ significantly between dogs receiving isoflurane and dogs receiving alfaxalone. CONCLUSION AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: No difference in oxygen delivery or severity of shock was observed when either inhaled isoflurane or intravenous alfaxalone infusion was used for maintenance of anaesthesia in greyhounds experiencing blood loss. There appears to be no clinical advantage to choosing one anaesthetic agent for maintenance of anaesthesia over the other in a dog experiencing blood loss.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24962497/