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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Epidural morphine reduces pain after shunt surgery in dogs

By Dancker, Christian et al.·Published in Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia·2020·University of Bristol School of Veterinary Sciences, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: The effect of neuraxial morphine on postoperative pain in dogs after extrahepatic portosystemic shunt attenuation.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 20 dogs with a congenital liver condition called extrahepatic portosystemic shunt (EHPSS) underwent surgery and were given either epidural morphine or no morphine to manage pain afterward. The dogs that received the morphine had significantly lower pain scores and needed less additional pain medication compared to those who did not. This suggests that using epidural morphine can be an effective way to reduce pain after this type of surgery. All dogs were able to eat and urinate normally after the procedure.

People also search for: dog EHPSS surgery pain management · epidural morphine for dogs · postoperative pain relief in dogs

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the analgesic effect of epidural morphine after surgical extrahepatic portosystemic shunt (EHPSS) attenuation. STUDY DESIGN: Randomized clinical trial. ANIMALS: A total of 20 dogs with a congenital EHPSS. METHODS: Dogs were randomly allocated to be given either a single epidural dose of 0.2 mg kgpreservative-free morphine (group M) or not (group C) before surgery. All dogs were administered 0.3 mg kgmethadone intravenously (IV) as preanaesthetic medication. Pain scores were determined every 2 hours for the first 24 hours postoperatively using the short-form Glasgow Composite Measure Pain Scale (GCMPS-SF). Dogs with a GCMPS-SF pain score >4/20 or >5/24 received 0.1 mg kgmethadone IV as rescue analgesia and were reassessed 30 minutes later. If more than three doses of methadone were administered in a 2 hour period, alternative pain relief was provided and a treatment failure recorded. The GCMPS-SF pain scores and number of rescue analgesia injections were analysed over 24 hours. The last observation carried forward method was applied in case of treatment failure. Food consumption and time to first urination were recorded. Data were analysed using a Mann-Whitney U test and presented as median (minimum-maximum range), with significance set at p < 0.05. RESULTS: Group M showed lower GCMPS-SF pain scores [15 (11-41) versus 31 (11-86); p&#xa0;= 0.023] and lower postoperative methadone requirements [0 (0-0.2) versus 0.25 (0-0.5) mg kg; p&#xa0;= 0.029] than group C. There were three treatment failures in group C only. Food consumption and time to first urination did not differ between groups. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Epidural morphine reduced the requirement for postoperative analgesia in this study population.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31718938/