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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Effect of ketamine hydrochloride on the analgesic effects of tramadol hydrochloride in horses with signs of chronic laminitis-associated pain.

Journal:
American journal of veterinary research
Year:
2012
Authors:
Guedes, Alonso G P et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences · United States
Species:
horse

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the effects of ketamine hydrochloride on the analgesic effects of tramadol hydrochloride in horses with signs of pain associated with naturally occurring chronic laminitis. ANIMALS: 15 client-owned adult horses with chronic laminitis. PROCEDURES: Each horse received tramadol alone or tramadol and ketamine in a randomized, crossover study (≥ 2 months between treatments). Tramadol (5 mg/kg) was administered orally every 12 hours for 1 week. When appropriate, ketamine (0.6 mg/kg/h) was administered IV for 6 hours on each of the first 3 days of tramadol administration. Noninvasive systemic blood pressure values, heart and respiratory rates, intestinal sounds, forelimb load and off-loading frequency (determined via force plate system), and plasma tumor necrosis factor-α and thromboxane B(2) concentrations were assessed before (baseline) during (7 days) and after (3 days) each treatment. RESULTS: Compared with baseline data, arterial blood pressure decreased significantly both during and after tramadol-ketamine treatment but not with tramadol alone. Forelimb off-loading frequency significantly decreased during the first 3 days of treatment with tramadol only, returning to baseline frequency thereafter. The addition of ketamine to tramadol treatment reduced off-loading frequency both during and after treatment. Forelimb load did not change with tramadol alone but increased with tramadol-ketamine treatment. Plasma concentrations of tumor necrosis factor-α and thromboxane B(2) were significantly reduced with tramadol-ketamine treatment but not with tramadol alone. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: In horses with chronic laminitis, tramadol administration induced limited analgesia, but this effect was significantly enhanced by administration of subanesthetic doses of ketamine.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22533391/