Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Pain relief with two methadone doses after dog knee surgery
By Upchurch, D et al.·Published in The Journal of small animal practice·2024·Department of Clinical Sciences, United States·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Two doses of subcutaneous methadone for postoperative analgesia in dogs undergoing tibial plateau levelling osteotomies.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs undergoing knee surgery (tibial plateau levelling osteotomy) received two doses of methadone for pain relief. The dogs were given either a lower or higher dose of methadone before surgery and again four hours later, along with another pain medication called carprofen eight hours after the first dose. Most dogs showed good pain control and only one needed extra pain relief. Overall, the treatment helped keep the dogs comfortable and pain-free for up to 12 hours after surgery, with few side effects noted.
People also search for: dog knee surgery pain relief · methadone for dogs after surgery · carprofen dosage for dogs
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate analgesia, sedation and adverse effects of two doses of subcutaneous methadone in dogs undergoing tibial plateau levelling osteotomy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Seventeen client-owned dogs undergoing unilateral tibial plateau levelling osteotomy were randomly allocated to receive either 0.25 mg/kg methadone (eight dogs) or 0.5 mg/kg methadone (nine dogs). All dogs were premedicated with methadone and 2 to 6 mcg/kg dexmedetomidine subcutaneously. They were induced and maintained on a standard protocol. All animals received a second dose of methadone subcutaneously 4 hours after premedication and a 4.4 mg/kg dose of carprofen subcutaneously at 8 hours after premedication. During surgery, blood pressure, heart rate and temperature were assessed every 5 minutes. Postoperatively, sedation scores, temperature, heart rate and Glasgow composite modified pain score - short form were assessed for 12 hours postoperatively. RESULTS: One of 17 (5.9%) dogs had intraoperative hypotension, nine of 17 dogs had intra-operative bradyarrhythmias and 17 of 17 dogs had intra-operative hypothermia. No dogs required intra-operative rescue. Composite modified pain score - short form scores were below the threshold for intervention in 16 of 17 (94.1%) animals. Only one of 17 (5.9%) dogs required rescue analgesia. Median sedation score was 0 by the T8 time point. Adverse events were rare in both groups with only vocalisation and hypothermia reported commonly postoperatively. CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE: Two doses of methadone at either 0.25 or 0.5 mg/kg administered via subcutaneous injections pre-operatively and 4 hours later, along with 4.4 mg/kg carprofen subcutaneously 8 hours after the first methadone dose appear to provide sufficient pain control for up to 12 hours in dogs undergoing tibial plateau levelling osteotomy.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38594836/