Title: Practical anaesthesia
1Practical anaesthesia
2Premedication
- Drugs given before anaesthesia is induced
- Good time to given an analgesic drug
- Carprofen (a NSAID) good choice for many species
and procedures - Opioids as well if a more painful procedure is
planned - Sedative to allow calm handling
- Historically, premedicants included drugs to
reduce salivation - Not usually necessary with more modern
anaesthetic drugs
3Anaesthetics may be given by various routes
- Possible routes are
- Inhalation
- Injection
- Local
- Routes may be combined
- Injectable agent to begin with (induction)
- Then inhalational anaesthesia for maintenance
4Monitoring peri-operative care
- Depth of anaesthesia must be checked before any
painful procedure starts - Depth then monitored continuously
- To ensure anaesthesia is adequate for the
procedure - BUT without being too deep, when risk from
cardiovascular and respiratory side effects - Important part of peri-operative care is to
minimise hypothermia at all stages of the
anaesthetic
5Recovery
- Rapid return to normal physiology behaviour
- Humane to minimise impact of the procedure on the
animal - Abnormal physiology leads to poor animal model
6Example 1 inhalation anaesthesia in the mouse
7Principles of inhalation anaesthesia
- Animal breathes in anaesthetic vapour delivered
in a carrier gas (oxygen /- nitrous oxide) - Crosses from alveoli to blood stream
- Reaches CNS and has anaesthetic effect
- Side effects
- Recovery process
- animal breathes off anaesthetic vapour
- minimal metabolism
8Agents used
- Two main agents
- Isoflurane
- Halothane
- Both are liquids at room temperature, placed in a
vaporiser - Oxygen passed through the vaporiser
- Vapour delivered in oxygen to the animal
9Carrier gases for isoflurane/ halothane
- Usually isoflurane/ halothane vapour delivered
using oxygen as the carrier gas - Nitrous oxide may be used as a carrier gas in
addition to oxygen - Not often in small species
- May be used in larger species
- Some analgesic effect
- Comes in and out of solution in the blood very
rapidly
10(mouse isoflurane videos x 2)
11Self-study
12Equipment used can be complex
13The anaesthetic machine
- Find the oxygen cylinder
- learn to change cylinder, ask about alarms
- Find the vaporiser
- learn how to fill it
- Learn where to connect a breathing system/
chamber - Learn how to connect up and use scavenging
equipment
14Example 2Injectable anaesthesiain the mouse
15Principles of injectable anaesthesia
- Drug is administered subcutaneous, intravenous,
intraperitoneal, intramuscular - Absorption and circulation
- depending on route
- Anaesthetic effect once it reaches the central
nervous system (CNS) - Recovery process
- Specific reversing agent for some injectable
anaesthetics - Metabolism (liver) excretion of drug (kidneys)
16Many agents and combinations
17Alpha 2 adrenoceptor agonists
- Xylazine and medetomidine
- Act at the alpha 2 receptor
- Produce sedation, muscle relaxation and some
analgesia - Side effects hypoxia, general cardiovascular and
respiratory depression, hypergylcaemia, diuresis - Specific antagonist available atipamezole
18Ketamine
- A dissociative anaesthetic
- NMDA receptor antagonist
- On its own can be used to restrain higher species
eg primates - For other species, used in combination with the
alpha-2 adrenoceptor agonists and will then
provide surgical anaesthesia
19Pentobarbitone
- Widely used in the past
- Poor analgesic, light anaesthesia only
- Narrow safety margin, with risk of respiratory
arrest if higher doses are used to try to obtain
surgical anaesthesia - Main use now is as a euthanasia agent
20Remember 3 aims of anaesthesia
- Single injectable agent often unable to produce
analgesia, loss of consciousness, muscle
relaxation abolition of reflexes on its own - Hence combinations are used
- Eg ketamine if used alone, poor muscle
relaxation and analgesia - Add xylazine improved analgesia and muscle
relaxation - Dose rates vary with species and strain
21(mouse injectable agent video)
22Self-study
23Find out which injectable anaesthetic agents you
are likely to use
- Background reading for each agent
- Use standard text to find out about each agent
- Which drug family does it belong to?
- Mechanism of action?
- Dose rates and usual routes of administration
- Is additional analgesia needed before and during
anaesthesia for a painful procedure?