Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Longer pre-surgery fluids cut anesthesia problems in dogs with gut
By Sliman, Michael P et al.·Published in Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association·2025·College of Veterinary Medicine·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Longer preoperative fluid resuscitation decreased anesthetic fluid interventions in 297 dogs undergoing surgery for gastrointestinal foreign body obstruction.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of 297 dogs undergoing surgery for gastrointestinal foreign body obstruction received different lengths of preoperative fluid treatment. The study found that dogs with longer fluid resuscitation before surgery needed fewer additional fluids during anesthesia, which can help reduce complications. However, the length of fluid treatment did not seem to affect the health of the intestinal tissue after surgery. Overall, providing fluids for a longer time before surgery can lead to a smoother anesthetic process for dogs.
People also search for: dog surgery recovery · gastrointestinal foreign body obstruction in dogs · preoperative fluid treatment for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The objectives were to (1) compare the impact of preoperative fluid resuscitation on anesthetic parameters and interventions and (2) assess the impact of preoperative resuscitation duration on the integrity of intestinal tissue and postoperative complications in dogs with gastrointestinal foreign body obstruction. METHODS: Medical records from 1 academic hospital were reviewed for 297 client-owned dogs that underwent gastrointestinal foreign body obstruction surgery between May 2017 and August 2022. Data collected included the following: signalment, preoperative fluid resuscitation, surgical findings, anesthetic parameters and interventions, postoperative complications, and timing of the first meal. Variables for preoperative length of fluid resuscitation (hours), total preoperative fluid bolus (mL/kg), and preoperative fluid rate (mL/kg/d) were changed to categorical variables. Associations between anesthetic interventions, postoperative outcomes, preoperative fluid resuscitation length, and total fluid bolus were assessed with ordered logistic regression. RESULTS: Shorter preoperative fluid resuscitation length was associated with higher anesthetic fluid rates (P = .033) and fluid boluses performed (P = .023). Increased total volume of preoperative fluid boluses was associated with anesthetic synthetic colloid use (P = .028). There was insufficient evidence to claim an association between the impact of preoperative fluid resuscitation length and intestinal wall compromise (perforation, P = .912; enterectomy performed, P = .711). CONCLUSIONS: Shorter preoperative fluid resuscitation was associated with increased anesthetic fluid interventions but not the need for more complex surgeries. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Longer fluid resuscitation periods are associated with fewer anesthetic interventions in dogs.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39454637/