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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Effects of repeated propofol anesthesia on cats during cancer

By Bley, Carla Rohrer et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2007·Vetsuisse Faculty·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Clinical assessment of repeated propofol-associated anesthesia in cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of cats undergoing short anesthesia for radiotherapy were given propofol, a common anesthetic, multiple times over several days. The study found that even with repeated use, the cats did not experience significant health issues during recovery, and their blood tests showed no major harmful changes. This suggests that propofol can be safely used for short procedures in cats without causing serious side effects.

People also search for: cat anesthesia safety · propofol effects in cats · cat radiotherapy recovery

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effects of repeated episodes of propofol-associated anesthesia on quality of recovery from anesthesia, clinical status, and erythrocyte physiology in cats. DESIGN: Original study. ANIMALS: 37 cats undergoing short-duration anesthesia for radiotherapy. PROCEDURES: Twice daily on 5 consecutive days, 13 cats with squamous cell carcinoma of the nasal planum (group 1) underwent anesthesia: first via administration of propofol or a midazolam (0.2 mg/kg [0.09 mg/lb])-propofol combination and then via administration of ketamine and midazolam each day (latter data were not analyzed). During a 19-day period, 24 cats with vaccine associated sarcoma (group 2) were anesthetized 12 times with propofol or a midazolam-propofol combination. Anesthesia was maintained with propofol in both groups. Hematologic analysis was performed before, during, and on completion of radiotherapy; changes in Hct and hemoglobin concentration between groups were compared. RESULTS: Mean duration of anesthesia was 8.1 minutes (range, 5 to 20 minutes); no adverse events were detected during recovery. Total dose of propofol administered did not differ between groups 1 (6.34 mg/kg [2.88 mg/lb]) and 2 (4.71 mg/kg [2.14 mg/lb]). Midazolam administration decreased the propofol dose by 26%. Overall decreases from baseline in Hct and hemoglobin concentration were not significantly different between the 2 groups, nor clinically important; however, compared with baseline, values in group 2 were significantly lower after 6 and 12 anesthetic episodes for both protocols. Heinz bodies were identified in low numbers in both groups during radiotherapy. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results indicated that repeated propofol-associated short-duration anesthesia does not lead to clinically relevant hematologic changes in cats undergoing short-duration radiotherapy.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/17975992/