Title: Prepare and monitor anaesthesia in animals
1Prepare and monitor anaesthesia in animals
2Scenarios
- Urgency Emergency Scenarios
- See Anaesthesia emergencies
- Physiological Scenarios
- Pathological Scenarios
3Physiological Scenarios
- Young animals (Paediatric)
- Old animals (Geriatric)
- Obesity
- Caesarians
- Brachycephalic breeds
- Sighthound breeds
- Small breeds
4Young animals
5Young animals
Problem Solution
Greater oxygen demand, ventilation less efficient and prone to lung consolidation if anaesthetised for long periods. Monitor oxygenation Careful selection of ET tube - not too long. Ventilatory support if needed.
Liver and kidney function immature. Use lower than adult dose rates. Use drugs that are rapidly metabolised. Avoid fluid overload.
Prone to hypoglycaemia. Monitor blood glucose. Maybe add glucose to IV fluids.
Prone to hypothermia. Monitor temperature. Keep warm.
6Young animals
- Pups kittens
- Neonate lt 4 weeks
- Pediatric 4-6 weeks
- Immature 16-52 weeks
7Young 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
8Young 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 lt 8wks old - Maintain PCV gt 20 and serum protein gt 35gm/l
9Young 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
10Young 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 gt 20 serum protein gt35 g/L
11Young 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
12Geriatric animals
13Geriatric animals
Problem Solution
May have heart problems, poorer circulation. Anaesthetics may take longer to work, give it time rather than increasing dose. Avoid fluid overload.
Require less anaesthetic Reduce dose premed and GA
Reduced lung elasticity, may have respiratory disease. Monitor oxygen carefully. Supplement oxygen prior to induction and during recovery. Carefully monitor ventilation, assist if required.
Reduced renal function. May be PU/PD IV Fluids. Increase fluid rate prior to induction, make sure patient not dehydrated.
Reduced hepatic function Use drugs that are rapidly metabolised
May have other underlying diseases Do pre-anaesthetic blood tests
May be on medication Get good history from owner
14Geriatric animals - Physiology
- Cardiovascular system function
- Respiratory function
- CNS
- Hepatic function
- Renal function
15Geriatric 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
16Geriatric 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
17Geriatric 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
18Geriatric 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
19Geriatric 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
20Geriatric 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
21Geriatric 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
22Geriatric 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
23Geriatric 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
24Geriatric animals - maintenance
- Inhalation best Isoflurane
25Geriatric animals - monitoring
- See section above
- Vital signs
- Mechanical devices
- Advise fluids for example hartmans solution
26Obesity
- Irregular gaseous anaesthesia?
- Restrictive pressures on URT
27Caesarian
28Caesarian Section
- G/A for small animals
- Local anesthesia for large animals usually
29Caesarian Section
Problem Solution
Increased oxygen consumption due to foetuses. Use at least 50 oxygen. Pre-oxygenate patient.
Risk of vomiting due to reduced gastric emptying time Can pre-med with metoclopramide. Be prepared for possibility of vomiting and aspiration during anaesthesia and recovery. Rapid induction - use IV agent, intubate quickly.
Patient may be exhausted and dehydrated. IV fluids ASAP
Distended abdomen puts pressure on diaphragm Minimise time animal is on its back. Ventilate if needed.
Foetuses can be affected by the drugs used. Keep induction to delivery time to min. Use lowest effective dose of drugs. Use short acting, rapidly metabolised drugs. Pre-clip
30Caesarian Physiology
- Blood volume gt ( cardiac output gt)
- But causes PCV lt as RBCs not increased
- Increase abdominal pressure causes diaphragm to
shift cranially causing lt functional residual
capacity - Increased RR, increased O2 consumption
increases minute ventilation - Delayed gastric emptying increases risk of
vomiting - Maternal anesthetic requirements reduced
31Caesarian Physiology
- Cardiac reserve depleted
- MAC lowered
- Increased speed of inhalation induction
- Inappropriate positioning lt cardiac output and
compromises ventilation - Respiratory depression - no O2 supplement will
result in foetal hypoxaemia
32Caesarian considerations
- History and PE
- Blood glucose, electrolytes an acid/base status
assessed if available - Fluids
33Caesarian 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
34Caesarian 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.
35Caesarian Maintenance
- Isoflurane
- /- nitrous oxide
36(No Transcript)
37Care 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
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41(No Transcript)
42Check for deformities
43/- Weigh
44(No Transcript)
45(No Transcript)
46(No Transcript)
47Brachycephalic Breeds
48Brachycephalic Syndrome
- Narrow nostrils (stenotic nares)
- Relatively long soft palate
- Narrow trachea (tracheal hypoplasia)
- Everted laryngeal saccules
- Laryngeal collapse
Normal gt Partial collapse gt Full collapse
49Brachycephalic Breeds
Problem Solution
Animal may be very stressed Use low-dose sedative.
May have trouble breathing spontaneously when extubated Avoid respiratory depressants, use only low-dose and short acting opiods. Use propofol- rapid induction, allows for top-up, rapid recovery. Use lignocaine gel on ET tubes and leave in as long as possible during recovery. Pre-oxygenate patient. Examine throat for mucous or other obstruction.
May have tracheal hypoplasia Use smaller ET tube than you would usually use for a patient of this size.
50Brachycephalic 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
51Brachycephalic Breeds
- Pre-oxygenate
- Rapid induction agent with rapid intubation
- On recovery leave ET tube in as long as possible
- virtually want them to cough it out!
52Sighthound Breeds
- Thin skin
- Initial rapid redistribution
- Altered hepatic metabolism of drugs
- Long recoveries
- Hypothermia
53Small/Toy Breeds
- Hypothermia
- Hypoglycemia
- Small veins
- Care with fluid administration (overhydration)
- Length of endotracheal tube
- Surgeons "resting" on patient
54Pathological Scenarios
- GDV
- Pyometra
- Pleural cavity
- Diaphragmatic hernia
- Pneumothroax/haemothorax
- Pulmonary
- Cardiac
- Kidney
- Liver
55GDV
56GDV
- Mainly large deep chested breeds
- Circulatory shock as high intra gastric pressure
causes obstruction to gastric circulation, caudal
vena cava and portal venous flow. Reduces venous
return to heart and cardiac output - Prolonged hypotension may lead to irreversible
renal failure, acute liver failure - Portal vein occlusion maybe initiates
endotoxaemia from gut flora - Enlarged stomach limits diaphragmatic
movements- initially tidal volume lt and RR gt to
maintain normal minute respiratory volume
57GDV
- Ventricular cardiac dysrhythmias common 12 48
hrs after the initial ischaemic episodes, maybe
occur 4 days post op - Cause unknown suspect myocardial ischaemic
hypoxia - Advise treat with lignocaine usually an infusion
58GDV
- Initial stabilisation needed
- A. decompress stomach
- B. correct hypovolaemic shock hartmans at
60-90mls/kg max. - Monitor PCV and TPP
- If TPP low may require colloids
- C. pain relief low dose opoids eg methadone or
pethidine - D. ECG - monitor
59GDV - Premeds
- Avoid drugs that cause vomiting
- Best methadone and pethidine
60GDV - Induction
- O2 prior to induction
- Small doses of thiopentone or propofol if no
longer severely compromized - If severe maybe intubate and put on gas
61GDV - maintenance
- Ovoid nitrous oxide as increases the volume and
pressure of gas containing spaces - Isoflurane agent of choice
- Maybe need IPPV
62Pyometra
63Pyometra
- Usually D/H as are PU/PD even if appears bright
- Usually have acidosis correct
- Hypotensive
- If closed will present with septic shock
64Pyometra
- Aggressive fluid therapy continue for at least
24 hrs post op and monitor urine output - Antiboitics
- Monitor blood glucose levels pre/op/post if
sepsis is suspected and supplement if required
65Pyometra
- Benzodiazepines and opioids as premeds cause
little C/V depression - Induction mask best
- Maintain on isoflurane
66Cardiac patients
- 1. Reduced cardiac reserve avoid stress as this
increases sympathetic tone and increases work
load on the heart - 2. If pulmonary edema present maybe require IPPV
- 3. may have or predispose to arrhythmias
- 4. Reduced myocardial contractility
- 5. reduced cardiac output favours brain perfusion
so lt amounts of IV agents required even though
induction may be slow
67Cardiac Disease drugs
- 1. opioids causes no significant reduction in
myocardial contractility - 2. Benzodiazepines minimal C/V effects
- 3. Phenothiazines only in VVV small doses,
AVOID in cardiac tamponade - 4. Barbituates/propofol slowly to effect, small
doses - 4. Isoflurane less arrythmiogenic effects
- 5. Anticholinergics
68Thoracotomy/Diaphragmatic hernia/Pneumothorax etc
Problem Solution
Cant breathe spontaneously once chest opened IPPV immediately after induction
May have stomach/intestines in chest cavity Dont use nitrous oxide.
69Diaphragmatic hernia
70Thoracic Surgery
- Pre Oxygenation is recommended
- Light sedation
- Quick induction and intubation
- Maintenance inhalational
- Pneumothorax avoid Nitrous oxide
- Take control of ventilation
- Neuromuscular blockers or
- Hyperventilation reduces PaCO2
71Thoracic Continued
- Mechanical ventilation
- Use of a ventilator or
- Anaesthetist squeezing rebreathing bag
- Post op
- Analgesics
- Local anaesthetics around the intercostal nerves
72Surgical fixes
Remove everted laryngeal saccule
Trim soft palate
Permanent tracheostomy
73Lung disease
74Lung disease
Problem Solution
Prone to hypoxia Pre-oxygenate. Rapid induction - use 100 oxygen. May need to ventilate. Supplement oxygen post operatively. Avoid drugs causing i may be helpful to animals with pulmonary oedema.
75Kidney disease
76Kidney disease
Problem Solution
Kidney function reserve reduced Maintain renal perfusion - IV fluids essential. Avoid hypotension, dont use ACP.
May be azotaemic (high urea, creatinine) Avoid prolonged fluid restriction. Correct prior to GA.
May be dehydrated.
May be polyuric Need higher than maintenance rates for fluids
May have electrolyte disturbances, hypoalbuminaemia, anaemia Correct prior to GA.
Reduced renal clearance of drugs. Dont use ketamine. Ok to use propofol, thiopentone, opioids, benzodiazepines.
Reduced renal clearance of drugs.
77Kidney disease
- Correct if possible prior to induction
- May be dehydrated
- May have electrolyte abnormalities
- May be anaemic Why?
- Premedication may not be required
- Induction rapid
- Best inhalational techniques
78Liver disease
79Liver disease
Problem Solution
May have low plasma protein (esp. albumin) Use lower doses of protein bound drugs. Avoid fluid overload (prone to oedema)
May have reduced clotting time Evaluate before surgery
Prone to hypoglycaemia Supplement IV fluids with glucose. Monitor blood glucose.
Reduced ability to metabolise some drugs Avoid thiopentone, ACP, diazepam. Opiates and propofol are OK.
Maybe anaemic - reduced oxygen carrying capacity. Evaluate prior to GA 100 oxygen
May be jaundiced - bilirubin and endotoxins from gut affecting kidneys IV fluids
80Liver disease
- Considerations
- May have decreased plasma proteins (increases
amount of free agents in blood) - Clotting factors may be affected
- May have anaemia
- May have ascites or pleural effusions
- Premedication usually not desirable
- Induction ultra-short acting drugs or gas
- Maintenance best is Isoflurane
81The End