Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
How flow rate and temperature affect dogs during high-flow oxygen
By Harduin, C et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2021·Intensive Care Unit (SIAMU), France·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Impact of flow and temperature on non-dyspnoeic dogs' tolerance undergoing high-flow oxygen therapy.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 12 dogs recovering from anesthesia were given high-flow nasal oxygen therapy to see how well they tolerated it at different flow rates and temperatures. The dogs were not having breathing problems, and their heart rates, breathing rates, and overall comfort levels were monitored during the treatment. The results showed that the dogs tolerated the oxygen therapy well, regardless of the flow rate or temperature used. This suggests that high-flow nasal oxygen therapy is safe and comfortable for dogs recovering from anesthesia.
People also search for: dog recovering from anesthesia · high-flow oxygen therapy for dogs · dog breathing problems after surgery
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To prospectively describe the impact of gas flow rate and temperature on dog's tolerance of high-flow nasal oxygen therapy during recovery from anaesthesia, hypothesizing that higher flow rates and temperatures will decrease tolerance. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twelve non-dyspnoeic client-owned dogs recovering from general anaesthesia were included in this study. After extubation, a nasal cannula was positioned and high-flow nasal oxygen therapy was initiated. Two flow rates (two or four time the theoretical minute ventilation: HF2 and HF4), each of them combined with two temperatures (31 and 37°C: T31 and T37), were randomly applied (four conditions per dog). For each condition, cardiovascular and respiratory parameters (heart rate, respiratory rate, systolic arterial blood pressure and pulse oximeter oxygen saturation), sedation score and tolerance score were recorded at initiation (T) and after 10 minutes of accommodation (T). RESULTS: Sedation scores were not significantly different between the four conditions. Cardiovascular and respiratory parameters were not significantly different between any condition at both Tand T. Tolerance scores were good and not significantly different between any flow rate or temperature (HF2-T31: 4 (2-4), HF4-T31: 4 (2-4), HF2-T37: 4 (2-4), HF4-T37: 4 (1-4)). CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The gas flow rates and temperatures studied have no impact on tolerance during the recovery period of non-dyspnoeic dogs, and high-flow nasal cannula is well tolerated. Further studies are required to confirm these results in dyspnoeic dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33346390/