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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Spinal epidural anesthesia used for surgery in a young dog

By NOVELLO, LORENZO & CORLETTO, FEDERICO·Published in Veterinary Surgery·2006·View original on Crossref

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Original publication title: Combined Spinal‐Epidural Anesthesia in a Dog

Species:
dog
Brain & nervesDogs

Plain-English summary

A 4-month-old male Collie underwent surgery for tail resection and exploration of the pelvic area. To manage pain during and after the surgery, veterinarians used a combination of spinal and epidural anesthesia, which included medications like bupivacaine and morphine. The dog showed no signs of pain during the procedure and had good pain relief afterward. There were no complications, and the dog was discharged without any issues 10 days later.

People also search for: dog tail surgery recovery · Collie anesthesia options · puppy pain management after surgery

Abstract

Objective—To report use of combined spinal epidural anesthesia for tail resection and surgical exploration of the pelvic canal and the perineal–pararectal area in a dog.Animal—A 4‐month‐old, 13 kg male Collie dog.Methods—Under inhalant anesthesia, an epidural catheter was threaded through a Tuohy needle at L5–L6. Then using a Whitacre spinal needle bupivacaine and fentanyl were administered in the subarachnoid space at L6–L7 level. Fifteen minutes later, morphine was administered epidurally. Bupivacaine and morphine were administered epidurally 4 hours after the subarachnoid injection.Results—No cardiorespiratory response to surgical stimulation was observed. Postoperative analgesia was satisfactory, and the catheter was removed 30 hours later. No complications or neurologic sequelae occurred before discharge or were noted 10 days later.Conclusion—Combined spinal‐epidural anesthesia provided excellent intraoperative anesthesia and perioperative analgesia in a dog undergoing surgery involving the pelvic canal.Clinical Relevance—Combined spinal‐epidural anesthesia can be performed in dogs, and its use should be considered in major surgeries caudal to the diaphragm, as the epidural catheter allows cranial extension of the block, providing excellent intraoperative anesthesia and perioperative analgesia.

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Original publication on Crossref: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1532-950x.2006.00131.x