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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Effect of retrobulbar nerve block on heart rate variability during enucleation in horses under general anesthesia.

Journal:
Veterinary ophthalmology
Year:
2014
Authors:
Oel, Carolin et al.
Affiliation:
Equine Clinic · Germany
Species:
horse

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Analysis of any effect of retrobulbar block during ocular surgery on heart rate variability and oculocardiac reflex. STUDY DESIGN: Prospective study. ANIMAL STUDIED: Horses (n = 16) undergoing eye enucleation due to chronic ophthalmologic diseases. PROCEDURE: Eye enucleation was performed under general anesthesia. The horses were randomly assigned to the first (inhalation anesthesia only, n = 10) or second group (inhalation and local retrobulbar anesthesia, n = 6). The retrobulbar block was performed using 12 mL of mepivacaine hydrochloride 2%. ECG data were taken by a Telemetric ECG before, during, and after surgery. Heart rate variability was analyzed in the time domain as mean heart rate, mean beat-to-beat interval duration, and standard deviation of continuous beat-to-beat intervals. The frequency domain analysis included the low- and high-frequency components of heart rate variability and the sympathovagal balance (low/high frequency). The low frequency represents mainly sympathetic influences on the heart, whereas high frequency is mediated by the parasympathetic tone. RESULTS: All horses without a retrobulbar block showed a significant decrease in the heart rate during traction on the globe and pressure on the orbital fat pad for homoestasis (P = 0.04). Simultaneously, high-frequency power, as an indicator of vagal stimulation, increased significantly. High-frequency and low-frequency power in the retrobulbar block group increased in five horses, and heart rate decreased in only one horse. Both were not significant within the group, but there was a significant difference between both groups relating to the incidence of heart rate decrease occurring at globe traction. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Heart rate variability is a sensitive, non-invasive parameter to obtain sympathovagal stimulations during general anesthesia. The retrobulbar block can prevent heart rate decrease associated with initiation of the oculocardiac reflex.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23738675/