Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Pain relief after limb amputation in dogs using liposomal
By Krugner-Higby, Lisa et al.·Published in Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association·2016·From the Department of Surgical Sciences·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Postoperative Analgesia Provided by Liposomal Hydromorphone in Client-Owned Dogs Undergoing Limb Amputation.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs undergoing limb amputation received either a new pain medication called liposomal hydromorphone or standard pain relief methods to see which worked better. The dogs given liposomal hydromorphone experienced similar pain relief as those receiving continuous fentanyl, a common pain medication. While some dogs in all groups still experienced pain, the side effects were manageable. Overall, liposomal hydromorphone proved to be an effective option for pain management after surgery.
People also search for: dog limb amputation pain relief · liposomal hydromorphone for dogs · postoperative pain management in dogs
Abstract
The analgesic efficacy of liposomal hydromorphone (LE-hydro) was tested in dogs undergoing limb amputation. The positive controls (n = 10) received subcutaneous (SQ) hydromorphone (0.2 mg/kg) and 1.5 mL of blank liposomes before surgery; fentanyl continuous rate infusion (CRI), 5-10 μg/kg/hr IV, during and for 24 hr after surgery; and a fentanyl patch at extubation. The negative controls (n = 7) received SQ hydromorphone (0.2 mg/kg) and 1.5 mLs of blank liposomes SQ before surgery, fentanyl CRI (5-10 μg/kg/hr IV) during surgery but stopped at extubation, and a fentanyl patch at extubation. The test group (n = 11) received 3 mg/kg of LE-hydro and 1.5 mL of saline SQ before surgery, 1.5 mL of saline SQ, and a saline CRI during surgery. All groups received a bupivacaine block in the limb prior to amputation and carprofen prior to surgery. Treatment failures, pain scores, opioid side effects, heart rate, respiratory rate, temperature, and client-reported pain and side effects were evaluated. There were three treatment failures in the positive control (3/10) and test groups (3/11). Negative controls had seven treatment failures (7/7). Side effects for all three groups were within expected limits. LE-hydro provides postoperative analgesia equivalent to fentanyl CRI in dogs undergoing limb amputation.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26606204/