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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Ketamine-propofol anesthesia with dexmedetomidine in cats having

By Ravasio, Giuliano et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2012·Department of Veterinary Sciences and Public Health, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of a ketamine-propofol drug combination with or without dexmedetomidine for intravenous anesthesia in cats undergoing ovariectomy.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

Fifteen healthy female cats were given a combination of ketamine and propofol for anesthesia during ovariectomy (spay surgery) to see how well they recovered. Some cats received an additional drug called dexmedetomidine, while others did not. The cats that only received the ketamine-propofol combination woke up faster and were less sedated in the first hour after surgery compared to those that also got dexmedetomidine. Overall, all the cats had smooth recoveries and adequate pain relief after the procedure, with no increase in Heinz bodies (a type of red blood cell change) noted after surgery.

People also search for: cat spay surgery anesthesia · ketamine propofol for cats · dexmedetomidine side effects in cats

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the use of a ketamine-propofol combination, with or without dexmedetomidine, in cats undergoing ovariectomy and to assess Heinz body formation following administration of these drugs. DESIGN: Randomized clinical trial. ANIMALS: 15 client-owned female cats. PROCEDURES: Anesthesia was induced with a ketamine (2.0 mg/kg [0.91 mg/lb])-propofol (2.0 mg/kg) combination with (n = 7) or without (8) dexmedetomidine (0.003 mg/kg [0.0013 mg/lb]) and was maintained via continuous IV infusion of a 1:1 ketamine-propofol combination (administration rate for each drug, 10.0 mg/kg/h [4.54 mg/lb/h]). Cats underwent ovariectomy; duration of infusion was 25 minutes. Physiologic variables were measured at predetermined time points. Heinz bodies were quantified via examination of blood smears. Numeric scales were used to assess quality of recovery, degree of sedation, and signs of pain after surgery. RESULTS: The ketamine-propofol group had a significantly higher mean heart rate at several time points during drug infusion, a significantly shorter time from the end of infusion to extubation (7 vs 29 minutes), and significantly lower sedation scores for the first hour after surgery than did the ketamine-propofol-dexmedetomidine group. Other variables were similar between groups; recovery was smooth, and anesthesia and postoperative analgesia were deemed adequate for all cats. The number of RBCs with Heinz bodies was not increased after surgery, compared with values immediately after anesthetic induction. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Total IV anesthesia with a ketamine-propofol combination, with or without dexmedetomidine, appeared to be effective in healthy cats. These short-term infusions produced smooth recovery and adequate analgesia during the postoperative period.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23113522/