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Prepare and monitor anaesthesia in animals. ANAESTHESIA SCENARIOS. Scenarios. Urgency & Emergency Scenarios See Anaesthesia emergencies Physiological Scenarios Pathological Scenarios. Physiological Scenarios. Young animals ( Paediatric ) Old animals ( Geriatric ) Obesity Caesarians*
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Prepare and monitor anaesthesia in animals ANAESTHESIA SCENARIOS
Scenarios • Urgency & Emergency Scenarios • See Anaesthesia emergencies • Physiological Scenarios • Pathological Scenarios
Physiological Scenarios • Young animals (Paediatric) • Old animals (Geriatric) • Obesity • Caesarians* • Brachycephalic breeds • Sighthound breeds • Small breeds
Young animals • ‘Pups & kittens’ • Neonate: < 4 weeks • Pediatric: 4-6 weeks • Immature: 16-52 weeks
Young animals - Physiology • Cardiovascular function - can only increase Hr not increase the force of the heart contractions • Respiratory function – have a higher O2 requirement • Hepatic – renal function – liver enzymes at very low levels • Body composition • Large SA to body ratio therefore prone to hypothermia • Poor regulation of body fluids – cannot cope conserve or cope with overload
Young animals - Pre-op • Correct pre-existing deficits • Rapid induction and recovery • Prevent hypothermia, hypoglycemia and dehydration • Should be on fluids warmed 10mls/kg/hr such as hartmans +/- 5% dextrose added • Minimize use of metabolizable drugs, no barbiturates if < 8wks old • Maintain PCV > 20 % and serum protein > 35gm/l
Young animals - Anaesthetics • Atropine – to all • Sedation – may not be needed, low dose opioids • Induction – a.if parenteral ketamine/valium or propofol or Alfaxalone • inhalation probably best –mask, chamber, drug of choice is isoflurane, may cause stress and release of adrenalin causing cardiac arrhythmias • Maintenance – inhalation G/A , T-piece
Young animals - Support • Supplementary heat & prepare with war fluids and warm IV fluids etc • Fluids essential • Hartmanns (10mLs/kg/hr) • May require 5% glucose need to monitor • Maintain PCV > 20 % & serum protein >35 g/L
Young animals – cases • Discuss the following for a 10 week old 4kg puppy to under go an elective ovariohysterectomy • Physical status: 1 2 3 4 E • Pre-anaesthetic considerations • Premedicants and rationale • Induction technique, agents & rationale • Maintenance technique • Monitoring • Post operative support and analgesia
Geriatric animals • Dogs > 7 years
Geriatric animals - Physiology • Cardiovascular system function • Respiratory function • CNS • Hepatic function • Renal function
Geriatric animals - CV function • Decrease with age due to • a decline in cardiac response to sympathetic nervous system stimulation • A rise in peripheral vascular resistance due to thickening of the walls of large arteries • This results in • Increased blood pressure • Reduction in cardiac output • Reduction in vascular volume • Less tolerance to anaesthetic drug induced cardiovascular depression
Geriatric animals - resp function • There is loss of strength of the muscles of respiration • A decrease in elastic recoil of the chest • An increase in the resting volume of the thoracic cage • Pulmonary capillary blood volume decreases & alveolar surface area, resulting in a reduction in diffusion capacity • Therefore there is an increased resistance to chest expansion and a decrease in gas exchange efficiency with age
Geriatric animals - CNS function • Reduction in brain weight with age due to a loss of individual cells • Increased breakdown and decreased production of neurotransmitters • Therefore the anaesthetic requirement decreases with age
Geriatric animals - liver function • Age related increase in BSP retention partly due to a decrease in liver blood flow • Drugs dependant on liver metabolism & biliary excretion for their have a prolonged plasma half life in aged patients
Geriatric animals - renal function Function decreases with age due to • Reduction of cortical renal mass, reduction in glomeruli and tubular atrophy • Reduction in renal blood flow • Therefore there is a reduced renal reserve (so less tolerant of dehydration or fluid overload) & a prolonged drug elimination • More susceptible to renal failure
Geriatric animals - drugs • Albumin mass is reduced so plasma protein binding of drugs is reduced • Results in higher levels of unbound (active) drugs • Receptor numbers also decline with age
Geriatric animals - pre-op • Correct pre –existing problems –fluids, assess by pre – G/A bloods, history, PE • Premeds to reduce stress on induction • 5 minutes pre –oxygenation if cardiopulmonary dysfunction • Keep warm as decreased ability to shiver • Handle gently and provide padding
Geriatric animals - pre-med • Anti-cholinergic such as atropine may not be needed ( an increased HR could stress the heart) • Opioids good premeds • Diazepam + Opioids – minimal cardiac depression • ACP –use with caution at low doses or not at all because of its long duration of hypotension, in animals with dehydration or poor cardiac or renal function
Geriatric animals - inductions • Thiopentone • Propofol – use with care in dehydrated animals as it will cause vasodilatation and therefore hypotension, minimal hepatic metabolism and renal excretion • Ketamine /valium – except in patients with cardiac disease as it increases sympathetic tone (increases HR and BP) • Inhalation – as long as not stressful particularly with cardiopulmonary disease
Geriatric animals - maintenance • Inhalation – best Isoflurane
Geriatric animals - monitoring • See section above • Vital signs • Mechanical devices • Advise fluids for example hartmans solution
Obesity • Irregular gaseous anaesthesia? • Restrictive pressures on URT
Caesarian Section • G/A for small animals • Local anesthesia for large animals usually
Caesarian Physiology • Blood volume > ( cardiac output >) • But causes PCV < as RBCs not increased • Increase abdominal pressure causes diaphragm to shift cranially causing < functional residual capacity • Increased RR, increased O2 consumption – increases minute ventilation • Delayed gastric emptying increases risk of vomiting • Maternal anesthetic requirements reduced
Caesarian Physiology… • Cardiac reserve depleted • MAC lowered • Increased speed of inhalation induction • Inappropriate positioning < cardiac output and compromises ventilation • Respiratory depression - no O2 supplement will result in foetal hypoxaemia
Caesarian considerations • History and PE • Blood glucose, electrolytes an acid/base status assessed if available • Fluids
Caesarian Premedication • Fluids – maybe with glucose • Minimal doses • Opioids good • +/- anticholinergics • +/- Midazolam ( short acting benzodiazepine ) • DO NOT USE – phenothiazines ( ACP ), butyrophenones, alpha2 agonists • Clip and prepare prior to induction if possible
Caesarian Induction • Pre oxygenation for 5 minutes • Rapid induction advised +/- on surgical table • +/- anti emetic • Minimize dorsal recumbency prior to intubations • Artificial ventilation should commence after intubations particularly when placed in dorsal recumbency.
Caesarian Maintenance • Isoflurane • +/- nitrous oxide
Care of neonate • Clear oral and nasal passages • Vigorous rubbing • Doxapram on tongue if apnoea • Intubate and ventilate if required • O2 via mask if required • Dry and keep warm • Encourage sucking ASAP
Brachycephalic Syndrome • Narrow nostrils (stenotic nares) • Relatively long soft palate • Narrow trachea (tracheal hypoplasia) • Everted laryngeal saccules • Laryngeal ‘collapse’ Normal > Partial collapse > Full collapse
Brachycephalic Breeds • Minimal, if any, sedation • Laryngoscope ready • Small ET tubes ready (down to 5.0mm!) • Pre-oxygenate (if not stressful) • Rapid induction agent with rapid intubation • On recovery leave ET tube in as long as possible