Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Carprofen before fracture surgery in dogs and kidney bleeding effects
By Bergmann, Hannes M L et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2005·Small Animal Clinic, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effects of preoperative administration of carprofen on renal function and hemostasis in dogs undergoing surgery for fracture repair.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 26 dogs undergoing surgery for broken bones received a pain medication called carprofen either before or after anesthesia. The study found that carprofen did not negatively affect kidney function or blood clotting in these dogs, even when they had existing issues due to their injuries. Most dogs showed improvement in their kidney and blood test results within four days after surgery. Overall, carprofen was safe for use in these surgical cases and helped manage pain without causing harm.
People also search for: dog surgery pain medication · carprofen side effects in dogs · dog kidney function after surgery
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate effects of preoperative administration of carprofen on renal function and hemostasis in dogs undergoing general anesthesia for fracture repair. ANIMALS: 26 client-owned dogs. PROCEDURE: Anesthesia was induced with levomethadone, diazepam, and propofol and maintained by administration of isoflurane in oxygen-nitrous oxide. Carprofen (4 mg/kg, SC) was administered 1 hour before induction to 13 dogs (group 1) and after extubation to the other 13 dogs (group 2). All dogs also received carprofen (4 mg/kg, SC, q 24 h) for the first 4 days after surgery. Renal function (glomerular filtration rate [GFR], urinary protein-to-urinary creatinine ratio [UP:UC], and results of urinalysis and biochemical analysis of plasma), hemostatic variables (bleeding time, platelet aggregation, prothrombin time [PT], activated partial thromboplastin time [APTT], and platelet count), and Hct were assessed before and at various time points after surgery. RESULTS: Analysis of results for renal function tests, most of the hemostatic and plasma biochemical variables, and Hct did not reveal significant differences between treatment groups. Values for GFR, UP:UC, PT, APTT, and platelet aggregation were outside reference ranges in many dogs before surgery and during the first 6 hours after surgery. In most dogs, these trauma-induced pathologic changes returned to within reference ranges during the 4-day period after surgery. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Carprofen did not cause clinically relevant adverse effects in dogs anesthetized for fracture repair after 5 days of treatment, even when it was administered before surgery or given to patients with trauma-induced alterations in renal function or hemostasis.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16173478/