Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How propofol affects eye pressure in dogs with and without glaucoma
By Webb, Terah R et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2018·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Effects of propofol on intraocular pressure in premedicated and nonpremedicated dogs with and without glaucoma.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs undergoing eye surgery had their eye pressure measured before and after receiving an anesthetic called propofol. The study found that dogs without glaucoma (a condition that raises eye pressure) showed increased eye pressure after propofol, while those with glaucoma had stable pressure. However, dogs that received pre-anesthetic medication before propofol had less increase in eye pressure, and some even showed a decrease. This suggests that using certain medications before anesthesia can help manage eye pressure in dogs with glaucoma.
People also search for: dog eye pressure treatment · glaucoma in dogs symptoms · propofol effects on dog eye pressure
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To establish a study cutoff for evidence of glaucoma on the basis of IOP measurements from a large population of healthy dogs and to assess the effects of IV propofol administration on IOPs in premedicated and nonpremedicated dogs with and without glaucoma defined by this method. DESIGN Prospective, descriptive study. ANIMALS 234 client-owned dogs. PROCEDURES IOPs measured in 113 healthy dogs (226 eyes) were used to calculate an IOP value indicative of glaucoma. The IOPs were measured in an additional 121 dogs (237 eyes) undergoing ophthalmic surgery. Midazolam-butorphanol was administered IV as preanesthetic medication to 15 and 87 dogs with and without glaucoma, respectively. A placebo (lactated Ringer solution) was administered IV to 8 and 11 dogs with and without glaucoma, respectively. Anesthesia of surgical patients was induced with propofol IV to effect. The IOPs and physiologic variables of interest were recorded before (baseline) and after preanesthetic medication or placebo administration and after propofol administration. RESULTS An IOP > 25 mm Hg was deemed indicative of glaucoma. Compared with baseline measurements, mean IOP was increased after propofol administration in nonpremedicated dogs without glaucoma and unchanged in nonpremedicated dogs with glaucoma. Propofol-associated increases in IOP were blunted in premedicated dogs without glaucoma; IOP in affected eyes of premedicated dogs with glaucoma was decreased after preanesthetic medication and after propofol administration. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Results indicated that preexisting IOP influences the response to anesthetic drugs, and administration of preanesthetic medication with muscle-relaxing properties may blunt or reduce propofol-induced increases in IOP. Further research with a larger number of dogs is needed to confirm our results in dogs with glaucoma.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29553899/