Literature DB >> 9839890

Changes in plasma cortisol concentrations in bitches in response to different combinations of halothane and butorphanol, with or without ovariohysterectomy.

S M Fox1, D J Mellor, C R Lawoko, H Hodge, E C Firth.   

Abstract

Changes in plasma cortisol concentrations were assessed in bitches in response to nine treatments: control, anaesthesia, analgesia, analgesia followed by anaesthesia, anaesthesia followed by analgesia at intubation, anaesthesia followed by analgesia at extubation, anaesthesia plus surgery, analgesia followed by anaesthesia plus surgery, and anaesthesia plus surgery followed by analgesia. The anaesthetic was halothane, the analgesic was butorphanol (0.4 mg kg(-1)) and the surgery was ovariohysterectomy. Blood samples, for plasma cortisol assays, were taken regularly from before treatment for five hours and then again after 24 hours. A small transient rise in plasma cortisol concentration in the control group was attributed to mild distress associated with novel experiences. A more pronounced and protracted rise in cortisol concentration in the analgesia group was ascribed to a dysphoric state of bitches under the influence of the agonist-antagonist butorphanol. Halothane anaesthesia alone resulted in no change in plasma cortisol concentration. When butorphanol was given after anaesthesia was induced or while the animal was still under the influence of anaesthesia (immediately after tracheal extubation), there was no immediate rise in plasma cortisol concentration and low concentrations were maintained for up to 60 minutes after halothane withdrawal. A marked rise in plasma cortisol concentration, which was sustained above pretreatment values for at least five hours, occurred in all surgery groups. Giving intravenous butorphanol 30 minutes prior to surgery had no effect on the surgically-induced rise in plasma cortisol concentration and no effect on the postsurgical plasma cortisol concentration. In contrast, butorphanol given at extubation did reduce plasma cortisol concentrations during the postsurgical period. These observations did not support the hypothesis that preoperative use of butorphanol would reduce the cortisol response after surgery under halothane anaesthesia.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9839890     DOI: 10.1016/s0034-5288(98)90163-1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Res Vet Sci        ISSN: 0034-5288            Impact factor:   2.534


  3 in total

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2.  Surgical stress and postoperative complications related to regional and radical mastectomy in dogs.

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3.  Cortisol concentration, pain and sedation scale in free roaming dogs treated with carprofen after ovariohysterectomy.

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  3 in total

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