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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Best ways to make dogs vomit fast: nose or vein apomorphine beats eye

By Manley, Sabrina R et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2024·Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Intranasal and intravenous apomorphine outperform ropinirole ocular drops for induction of emesis in dogs within ten minutes: a randomized, controlled clinical trial.

Species:
dog
Dog vomitingStomach & digestionDogs

Plain-English summary

A group of 125 dogs was tested to see which method worked best to make them vomit quickly after eating something harmful. The dogs received either an injection of apomorphine through their nose or vein, or ropinirole eye drops. The nose spray worked well, making 18 out of 25 dogs vomit within 10 minutes, while the eye drops were less effective, with only 14 out of 25 dogs vomiting. The injection through the vein was the most effective, with 22 out of 25 dogs vomiting, but it was harder to give. Overall, the nose spray is a good option if an injection isn't possible.

People also search for: dog vomiting treatment · how to make my dog vomit · apomorphine for dogs · ropinirole eye drops for dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The primary goal was to compare the efficacy of administration of apomorphine (APO) administered by intranasal (IN), transconjunctival (TC), SC and IV routes with ropinirole eye drops for induction of emesis in dogs with a secondary goal to evaluate the time of emesis as well as difficulty in administration. ANIMALS: 125 client-owned dogs. METHODS: Dogs were randomly enrolled between October 1, 2021, and March 30, 2022, into groups of 25: IV APO, IN APO, TC APO, SC APO, and ropinirole eye drops. The IV, SC, and TC groups were dosed at 0.03 mg/kg, the IN group was dosed at 0.06 mg/kg, and the ropinirole group was dosed according to manufacturer guidelines. Data collected included success rate of emesis within 600 seconds, time to emesis, time to administer, and difficulty score. Results were compared to IV with P values and CIs being adjusted for multiple comparisons. RESULTS: Emesis was successful within 600 seconds using IV APO in 22 of 25 dogs. By comparison, IN APO induced emesis in 18 of 25 dogs (P = .63). Ropinirole (14/25), SC APO (6/25), and TC APO (4/25) were significantly less successful (P = .047, P = < .001, and P < 0.001, respectively). When emesis was successful, it occurred most rapidly with TC APO, followed by IN APO and then ropinirole. It was most difficult to administer IV APO and TC APO. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Similar to IV APO, IN APO was a rapid, easy, and effective method of inducing emesis in dogs and should be considered when IV administration is not possible. Ropinirole was easy to administer but successfully induced emesis less reliably within a 10-minute timeframe. APO administered TC using the commercially compounded injectable formulation was ineffective.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38452486/