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Does electroacupuncture ease pain after spay surgery in dogs

By Iwe, Celine et al.·Published in Frontiers in veterinary science·2024·Department for Clinical Diagnostics and Services·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Does perioperative electroacupuncture reduce postoperative pain in dogs undergoing ovariohysterectomy?

Species:
dog
Dog having seizuresStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 56 healthy female dogs undergoing spay surgery (ovariohysterectomy) received either electroacupuncture or a placebo treatment right before their procedure to see if it would help with pain afterward. After surgery, both groups showed increased pain levels, especially three and six hours post-op, indicating that many dogs still needed additional pain relief. The study found that the electroacupuncture did not significantly reduce pain compared to the placebo, suggesting that this treatment alone may not be enough for effective pain management after spaying.

People also search for: dog spay surgery pain relief · electroacupuncture for dogs · postoperative pain management in dogs

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: This study aimed to investigate the analgesic efficacy of perioperative electroacupuncture in fifty-six healthy female dogs undergoing ovariohysterectomy as part of a catch-neuter-release project. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Ten minutes after sedation with 20 μg/kg medetomidine combined with 0.3 mg/kg butorphanol intramuscularly, the dogs were randomly allocated into two groups and received either electroacupuncture (EA,= 27) or sham acupuncture (C,= 29) treatment for 10 min (after sedation until the end of the surgery) at 6 different acupuncture points LI-4 (Large intestine 4), LIV-3 (Liver 3), ST-36 (Stomach 36), SP-6 (Spleen 6) bilateral. After administration of 0.2 mg/kg meloxicam and anesthesia induction with 2 mg/kg ketamine intravenously, ovariohysterectomy was performed by the same experienced surgeon using a midline surgical approach in dorsal recumbency. Pain was evaluated by two blinded and independent anesthetists using the Short Form of the Multimodal Glasgow Composite Pain Scale (mCMPS-SF) before sedation (T0), and three (T3), six (T6), and 24 h (T24) after anesthesia induction. RESULTS: Postoperative pain scores did not differ significantly between the groups (= 0.36), but increased significantly three (T3) (= 0.001) and six (T6) (p = 0.001) hours after surgery compared to before sedation and 24 h postoperative in both groups. Three hours after surgery (T3), 89.4% and six hours postoperatively (T6), 71.4% of the dogs in both groups exceeded the analgesic intervention threshold of the mCMPS-SF, indicating the need for rescue analgesia. DISCUSSION: The results of the study indicate that perioperative electroacupuncture treatment did not improve postoperative pain in dogs undergoing ovariohysterectomy. Therefore, a 10-min electroacupuncture treatment may be insufficient to provide effective postoperative analgesia. The pain assessment in feral dogs was notably impacted by anxious behavior, which may have influenced the final outcome The pain threshold was exceeded in ¾ of the dogs in the early postoperative phase (T3, T6), suggesting that the widely used anesthesia protocol consisting of butorphanol, ketamine and medetomidine in combination with meloxicam may not provide long-lasting and sufficient pain relief.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39840340/