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Pain relief after eye removal surgery in dogs: carprofen vs tramadol

By Delgado, Cherlene et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2014·Department of Surgical Sciences·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Comparison of carprofen and tramadol for postoperative analgesia in dogs undergoing enucleation.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 43 dogs undergoing eye removal surgery (enucleation) were given either carprofen or tramadol to help manage pain after the procedure. The dogs were monitored for pain levels at various times after surgery. It turned out that more dogs who received tramadol needed extra pain relief compared to those given carprofen. Overall, carprofen seemed to provide better pain control for these dogs after surgery, leading to fewer needing additional medication.

People also search for: dog eye surgery pain relief · tramadol vs carprofen for dogs · postoperative pain management in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare analgesia provided by carprofen and tramadol in dogs after enucleation. DESIGN: Randomized, masked clinical trial. ANIMALS: 43 dogs. PROCEDURES: Client-owned dogs admitted for routine enucleation were randomly assigned to receive either carprofen or tramadol orally 2 hours prior to surgery and 12 hours after the first dose. Dogs were scored for signs of pain at baseline (ie, before carprofen or tramadol administration) and at 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 24, and 30 hours after extubation. Dogs received identical premedication and inhalation anesthesia regimens, including premedication with hydromorphone. If the total pain score was ≥ 9 (maximum possible score of 20), there was a score ≥ 3 in any of 5 behavioral categories (highest score possible per category was 3 or 4), or the visual analog scale (VAS) score was ≥ 35 (maximum possible score of 100) combined with a palpation score > 0, rescue analgesia (hydromorphone) was administered and treatment failure was recorded. RESULTS: No differences were found in age, sex, or baseline pain scores between groups. Significantly more dogs receiving tramadol required rescue analgesia (6/21), compared with dogs receiving carprofen (1/22). Pain and VAS scores decreased linearly over time. No significant differences were found in pain or VAS scores between groups at any time point (dogs were excluded from analysis after rescue). CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results of this study suggested that carprofen, with opioid premedication, may provide more effective postoperative analgesia than tramadol in dogs undergoing enucleation.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25459482/