PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Suspected vagal reflex and hyperkalaemia inducing asystole in an anaesthetised horse.

Journal:
Equine veterinary journal
Year:
2022
Authors:
Ryan, Aoife et al.
Affiliation:
University of Veterinary Medicine
Species:
horse

Plain-English summary

A 10-year-old mustang gelding weighing 466 kg was taken to a specialized horse hospital for surgery to fix fractures in his nose and face caused by an unknown injury. During the surgery, he was put under general anesthesia and received a local anesthetic to help manage pain. While under anesthesia, the horse developed high potassium levels, which can affect heart function, but it was believed that this was not the main reason for his heart stopping. Instead, it was thought that a reflex related to the nerves in the face might have played a bigger role in causing the heart to stop. The treatment and management during the surgery were complicated, but the specific outcome regarding the horse's recovery is not detailed in the abstract.

Abstract

A 10-year-old 466 kg mustang gelding presented to an equine referral hospital for surgical repair of nasal, frontal and lacrimal bone fractures from an unknown trauma. Surgical repair was performed under general anaesthesia, including a right-sided maxillary regional anaesthetic block with mepivacaine hydrochloride. Progressive hyperkalaemia was documented perianaesthetically (T-3 mins; 134 mins after induction; potassium 6.4 mmol/L (ref 3.5-5.1 mmol/L). Perianaesthetic bradycardia was attributed to alpha -2 agonist infusion administration, and other characteristic ECG changes (flattened P waves, narrow T waves of increased amplitude, prolonged QRS complex) were not documented. Asystole occurred 137 min after induction of anaesthesia; however, a review of the available literature suggests the degree of hyperkalaemia documented was unlikely to be the primary cause of asystole but may have been a contributing factor. It is hypothesised that a trigeminocardiac reflex was the primary contributory factor to asystole in the described case, and may represent a maxillomandibulocardiac reflex that has not been previously described in the horse.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34738246/