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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Pain relief during eye surgery in dogs using a special nerve block

By Lardone, E et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2025·Department of Veterinary Science, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Perioperative analgesic effects of a modified supratemporal retrobulbar block in dogs undergoing corneal and endocular surgery.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Nine dogs undergoing eye surgery received a special pain relief technique called a modified supratemporal retrobulbar block, while another nine dogs did not receive this treatment. The dogs that had the retrobulbar block needed significantly less rescue pain medication during and after surgery and showed fewer signs of discomfort, like eye rubbing. Overall, the dogs that received this block had a smoother recovery compared to those who didn't. This technique may be a helpful option for managing pain in dogs undergoing ocular procedures.

People also search for: dog eye surgery pain relief · retrobulbar block for dogs · dog recovery after eye surgery

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the perioperative efficacy of a modified supratemporal retrobulbar block in dogs undergoing ocular surgery. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In this prospective randomised clinical trial, dogs were premedicated with dexmedetomidine (1 mcg/kg im) and methadone (0.1 mg/kg im), induced with propofol to effect and maintained with isoflurane (FE'Iso 1.1%). In the retrobulbar group a mixture of lidocaine 2% (5.5 mL) and ropivacaine 0.75% (2 mL) was administered at 0.1 mL/kg, via a modified supratemporal technique using a Tuohy needle. No block was performed in the controls. When heart rate or mean arterial pressure increased above 30% of the pre-incisional values, fentanyl (1 mcg/kg iv) was administered. Propofol (1 mg/kg iv) was injected when anaesthesia was deemed too light. After a total of three administrations regardless of the type of drugs (fentanyl/propofol), a constant rate infusion of fentanyl (5 mcg/kg/h iv) was started. Quality of recovery (blindly assessed using a descriptive score scale), postoperative eye rubbing and complications were studied. RESULTS: Eighteen dogs were included. The retrobulbar group (nine) dogs had significantly less risk of receiving fentanyl than controls (nine) (Relative risk:  0.142, 95% CI: 0.021 to 0.936) and a recovery score > 2 (RR: 0.058, 95% CI: 0.003 to 0.887). The median amount of fentanyl (mcg/kg) was statistically lower in the retrobulbar group than in the controls: 0 mcg/kg (range, 0 to 1) versus 2 mcg/kg (range, 0 to 8.49), respectively. Only controls showed eye rubbing. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: The modified supratemporal retrobulbar block reduced the intraoperative rescue analgesia and improved the quality of recovery.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39799983/