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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Tear production drops in dogs

By Komnenou, A T H et al.·Published in The Veterinary record·2013·Department of Surgery·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Evaluation of aqueous tear production in dogs after general anaesthesia with medetomidine-propofol-carprofen-halothane.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 39 dogs had surgery under general anesthesia using a combination of medications that included medetomidine, propofol, carprofen, and halothane. After the surgery, the dogs showed a significant drop in tear production, which could lead to dry eyes. Thankfully, their tear production returned to normal within two hours after waking up from anesthesia. To help prevent any discomfort during this time, veterinarians recommend using tear substitutes for dogs undergoing this type of anesthesia from the time they receive the sedative until at least two hours after the procedure.

People also search for: dog dry eyes after surgery · tear substitutes for dogs · anesthesia effects on dog tear production

Abstract

The influence of an anaesthetic protocol, which included medetomidine, propofol, carprofen and halothane on tear production in the dog. There are no previous studies on the effects of this combination on tear production in dogs or in any other species. The present study included 39 dogs, which underwent non-ophthalmic surgery in our clinic. Preanaesthetically, all dogs had normal tear production (18.62&#xb1;3.65 mm/minute) as this was recorded with Schirmer tear test I (STT I) and the ophthalmologic examination did not reveal anything abnormal. Tear production readings were recorded before the administration of premedication, at the end of anaesthesia, one hour and two hours postanaesthesia. No reverse agent was administrated. At the end of anaesthesia (right eye (oculus dexter, OD) P<0.0005, left eye (oculus sinister, OS) P<0.0005), as well as one hour postanaesthesia (OD P=0.020, OS P=0.001) there was a statistically significant reduction in tear production, which returned to normal values two hours postanaesthesia, regardless of the duration of the operation. This anaesthetic combination resulted in a decrease in tear production and, therefore, the use of tear substitute treatment in dogs undergoing anaesthesia with this protocol (combination) from the time the sedative is given until at least two hours after the end of anaesthesia is highly recommended.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23832267/