Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Risk of death from anesthesia and sedation in dogs in UK vet clinics
By Shoop-Worrall, Stephanie Jw et al.·Published in Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia·2022·The University of Manchester, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Mortality related to general anaesthesia and sedation in dogs under UK primary veterinary care.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A study looked at the risk of death related to general anesthesia or sedation in over 157,000 dogs treated at veterinary clinics in the UK. Out of these, only a small number (159 dogs) died within 48 hours of undergoing anesthesia, and 219 died within two weeks. Factors like older age and certain health conditions increased the risk, while mixed breed dogs had a lower risk compared to Rottweilers and West Highland White Terriers. Overall, the risk of death from anesthesia was low, especially for common procedures like neutering.
People also search for: dog anesthesia risks · Rottweiler anesthesia safety · neutering dog death risk
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To quantify and explore risk factors in dogs seen at primary care UK veterinary clinics for general anaesthetic (GA)/sedative-related death overall, in addition to neuter-specific procedures. STUDY DESIGN: A nested case-control study within UK primary care veterinary electronic patient record surveillance programme, VetCompass, including over 300 UK veterinary practices. ANIMALS: A total of 157,318 dogs undergoing GA/sedative events. METHODS: Cases included dogs undergoing GA/sedative events between January 2010 and December 2013 with GA/sedative-related death recorded within 48 hours or 2 weeks of the event. Controls were randomly selected from dogs undergoing GA/sedation that did not die within these time periods. Risks of GA/sedative-related death for all surgeries and neuter-specific surgeries were estimated. Demographic and clinical associations with GA/sedative-related death were reported as odds ratios following multivariable logistic regression modelling. Statistical significance was set at 5%. RESULTS: From 157,318 dogs with a GA/sedative event, there were 159 (0.10%) within 48 hours and 219 (0.14%) GA/sedative-related deaths within 2 weeks. Within 89,852 dogs that underwent a neuter surgery, there were eight GA/sedative related (0.009%). Greater age, poorer American Society of Anaesthesiologists health status scores and more urgent procedures were associated with greater odds of death. Compared with mixed breeds, Rottweilers and West Highland White Terriers had greater odds and Cocker Spaniels had lower odds of GA/sedative-related death. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The overall risk for GA/sedative related death was relatively low, particularly among the subset of dogs undergoing castration or ovariohysterectomy surgery. Associations and risk estimates may assist shared decision-making in clinical practice and provide benchmarks for audit.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35985925/