Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Local anesthetic injection reduces pain after dog eye removal surgery
By Myrna, Kathern E et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2010·Department of Surgical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effectiveness of injection of local anesthetic into the retrobulbar space for postoperative analgesia following eye enucleation in dogs.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 22 dogs undergoing routine eye surgery to remove an eye (enucleation) received either a local anesthetic (bupivacaine) or a saline solution to see which helped with pain afterward. The dogs that got the bupivacaine needed much less pain relief medication after surgery compared to those that received saline. Specifically, only 2 out of 11 dogs in the bupivacaine group required extra pain relief, while 9 out of 11 in the saline group did. This suggests that using bupivacaine can effectively manage pain after eye surgery in dogs.
People also search for: dog eye surgery pain relief · bupivacaine for dogs · postoperative care after dog eye removal
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of a retrobulbar bupivacaine nerve block for postoperative analgesia following eye enucleation in dogs. DESIGN: Randomized controlled trial. ANIMALS: 22 dogs. PROCEDURES: Client-owned dogs admitted to the hospital for routine eye enucleation were enrolled with owner consent and randomly assigned to a treatment (bupivacaine hydrochloride) or control (saline [0.9% NaCl] solution) group. Baseline subjective pain scores were recorded. Anesthesia consisted of hydromorphone and midazolam preoperatively, thiopental or propofol for induction, and isoflurane in oxygen for maintenance. An inferior-temporal palpebral retrobulbar injection of either saline solution or bupivacaine was administered. Transpalpebral eye enucleation was performed. Pain scores were recorded at 0.25, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, and 24 hours after extubation (time 0) by observers masked to treatment groups. Dogs were given hydromorphone (0.2 mg/kg [0.09 mg/lb], IM or IV) as a rescue analgesic if the subjective pain score totaled >or= 9 (out of a maximum total score of 18) or >or= 3 in any 1 category. RESULTS: 9 of 11 control dogs required a rescue dose of hydromorphone, but only 2 of 11 dogs in the bupivacaine treatment group required rescue analgesia. Mean time to treatment failure (ie, administration of rescue analgesia following extubation) was 0.56 hours (95% confidence interval, 0.029 to 1.095 hours) for the 11 dogs that received hydromorphone. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Retrobulbar administration of bupivacaine in dogs in conjunction with traditional premedication prior to eye enucleation was an effective form of adjunctive analgesia and reduced the need for additional postoperative analgesics.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20632790/