Literature DB >> 17894588

Comparison of analgesic efficacy of preoperative or postoperative carprofen with or without preincisional mepivacaine epidural anesthesia in canine pelvic or femoral fracture repair.

Hannes M Bergmann1, Ingo Nolte, Sabine Kramer.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare analgesic efficacy of preoperative versus postoperative administration of carprofen and to determine, if preincisional mepivacaine epidural anesthesia improves postoperative analgesia in dogs treated with carprofen. STUDY
DESIGN: Blind, randomized clinical study. ANIMALS: Dogs with femoral (n=18) or pelvic (27) fractures.
METHODS: Dogs were grouped by restricted randomization into 4 groups: group 1 = carprofen (4 mg/kg subcutaneously) immediately before induction of anesthesia, no epidural anesthesia; group 2 = carprofen immediately after extubation, no epidural anesthesia; group 3 = carprofen immediately before induction, mepivacaine epidural block 15 minutes before surgical incision; and group 4 = mepivacaine epidural block 15 minutes before surgical incision, carprofen after extubation. All dogs were administered carprofen (4 mg/kg, subcutaneously, once daily) for 4 days after surgery. Physiologic variables, nociceptive threshold, lameness score, pain, and sedation (numerical rating scale [NRS], visual analog scale [VAS]), plasma glucose and cortisol concentration, renal function, and hemostatic variables were measured preoperatively and at various times after surgery. Dogs with VAS pain scores >30 were administered rescue analgesia.
RESULTS: Group 3 and 4 dogs had significantly lower pain scores and amount of rescue analgesia compared with groups 1 and 2. VAS and NRS pain scores were not significantly different among groups 1 and 2 or among groups 3 and 4. There was no treatment effect on renal function and hemostatic variables.
CONCLUSIONS: Preoperative carprofen combined with mepivacaine epidural anesthesia had superior postoperative analgesia compared with preoperative carprofen alone. When preoperative epidural anesthesia was performed, preoperative administration of carprofen did not improve postoperative analgesia compared with postoperative administration of carprofen. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Preoperative administration of systemic opioid agonists in combination with regional anesthesia and postoperative administration of carprofen provides safe and effective pain relieve in canine fracture repair.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17894588     DOI: 10.1111/j.1532-950X.2007.00314.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vet Surg        ISSN: 0161-3499            Impact factor:   1.495


  3 in total

1.  Comparison of carprofen and tramadol for postoperative analgesia in dogs undergoing enucleation.

Authors:  Cherlene Delgado; Ellison Bentley; Scott Hetzel; Lesley J Smith
Journal:  J Am Vet Med Assoc       Date:  2014-12-15       Impact factor: 1.936

2.  Swine as the Animal Model for Testing New Formulations of Anti-Inflammatory Drugs: Carprofen Pharmacokinetics and Bioavailability of the Intramuscular Route.

Authors:  Lidia Gómez-Segura; Antoni Boix-Montañes; Mireia Mallandrich; Alexander Parra-Coca; José L Soriano-Ruiz; Ana Cristina Calpena; Álvaro Gimeno; David Bellido; Helena Colom
Journal:  Pharmaceutics       Date:  2022-05-12       Impact factor: 6.525

3.  A comparison of pre and post-operative vedaprofen with ketoprofen for pain control in dogs.

Authors:  Denise Tabacchi Fantoni; Keila Kazue Ida; Thais Ingles de Almeida; Aline Magalhães Ambrósio
Journal:  BMC Vet Res       Date:  2015-02-07       Impact factor: 2.741

  3 in total

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