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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Bupivacaine liposome injection eases pain after dog knee surgery

By Lascelles, B Duncan X et al.·Published in BMC veterinary research·2016·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Pilot, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical field study to evaluate the effectiveness of bupivacaine liposome injectable suspension for the provision of post-surgical analgesia in dogs undergoing stifle surgery.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of dogs undergoing surgery for knee problems received either a new long-lasting pain relief injection (bupivacaine liposome) or a saline solution as a placebo. The dogs that received the bupivacaine showed significantly less pain and needed less additional pain medication in the days following their surgery compared to those who got the placebo. This new treatment effectively managed pain for up to 72 hours after the procedure without causing any serious side effects.

People also search for: dog knee surgery pain relief · bupivacaine for dogs · post-surgery pain management for dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Local anesthetics are an important component of perioperative pain management, but the duration of action of available products is limited. We hypothesized that a single local infiltration of a novel bupivacaine liposome injectable suspension (AT-003) would provide clinically effective analgesia over a 72-h period. In a masked, randomized, placebo-controlled, multi-center pilot field study, dogs undergoing lateral retinacular suture placement for cranial cruciate insufficiency were randomly assigned to surgical site infiltration with AT-003 (5.3 mg/kg) or an equivalent volume of saline. Infiltration of the surgical site was done prior to closure. Primary outcome measure was the Glasgow Composite Measure Pain Scale (CMPS-SF) assessed prior to surgery and at 2, 4, 8, 12, 24, 30, 36, 48, 54, 60 and 72 h following surgery by trained individuals. Provision for rescue analgesia was employed. Repeated measures analysis of variance were utilized to test for possible differences between treatment groups and a success/failure analysis was also employed, based on the need for rescue analgesia. RESULTS: Forty-six dogs were enrolled and evaluated. For CMPS-SF scores there was a significant overall treatment effect (p = 0.0027) in favor of AT-003. There were significantly more successes in the AT-003 group compared to placebo over each time period (p = 0.0001 for 0-24 h, p = 0.0349 for 0-48 h, and p = 0.0240 for 0-72 h). No significant adverse events were seen. CONCLUSIONS: AT-003 (bupivacaine liposome injectable suspension) provided measurable local analgesia over a 72-h period following post-stifle surgery surgical site tissue infiltration. Further work is indicated to develop this product for clinical use.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27531019/