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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

IV ketorolac for pain relief during dog spay surgery

By Cagnardi, P et al.·Published in Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics·2013·Dipartimento di Scienze Veterinarie per la Salute, Italy·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Pharmacokinetics and perioperative efficacy of intravenous ketorolac in dogs.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

Fifteen dogs undergoing surgery for neutering received an intravenous pain medication called ketorolac to help manage their pain. The dogs were monitored during and after the procedure, and none required additional pain relief, indicating that ketorolac was effective. The medication provided good pain control for about six hours post-surgery, and no side effects were reported. This suggests that ketorolac could be a useful option for managing pain in dogs after surgery.

People also search for: dog surgery pain relief · ketorolac for dogs · post-operative pain management in dogs

Abstract

Ketorolac (KET) is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug approved for the use in humans that possesses a potent analgesic activity, comparable to morphine, and could represent a useful tool to control acute pain also in animals. The clinical efficacy and pharmacokinetic profile of intravenous (IV) ketorolac tromethamine (0.5 mg/kg) were studied in 15 dogs undergoing gonadectomy. Intra-operative cardiorespiratory variables were monitored, and post-operative pain was assessed using a subjective pain score (0-24) in all dogs, whereas the pharmacokinetic profile of the drug was determined in 10 animals. During surgery, mean minimal alveolar concentration of isoflurane was 1.69 ± 0.11%, and normocapnia and spontaneous ventilation were maintained in all animals. During pain assessment, no significant differences between males and females were found, and in no case rescue analgesia was necessary. No adverse effects were reported. Serum samples were purified by solid-phase extraction and analysed by HPLC with UV-Vis detection. A large variability was observed in serum concentrations. The kinetics of ketorolac was described by a noncompartmental analysis. The elimination half-life (t½λz ) and ClB were 10.95 ± 7.06 h and 92.66 ± 84.49 mL/h/kg, respectively, and Vdss and Vz were 1030.09 ± 620.50 mL/kg and 1512.25 ± 799.13 mL/kg, respectively. AUC(0→last) and MRT(0→last) were 6.08 ± 3.28 h × μg/mL and 5.59 ± 2.12 h, respectively. The results indicate that ketorolac possess good post-operative analgesic effects until about 6 h after administration in dogs undergoing moderately painful surgery.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23473380/