T/F: Pediatric patients and geriatric patients are more susceptible to CV depression caused by anesthetic drugs than young adults
True
T/F: Pediatric and geriatric patients are both prone to hypothermia
true
some boxers have reportedly suffered hypotension and bradycardia after receiving ________ as a premedication
Acepromazine
pediatric (especially toy breed) dogs and pediatric cats may suffer from ________ peri-anesthetically.
Hypoglycemia
T/F: Pediatric patients should only be fasted for 1-2hours, and then should have their blood glucose concentration checked
true
Name two reasons it is important to have venous access during general anesthesia
Fluid therapy, emergency drugs
what is preoxygenation and why do we do it?
Several minutes of 100% O2 before anesthetics increase time to hypoxia if airway is compromised
Discuss the challenges of incubating a brachycephalic dog or cat, and how you should prepare for intubation in these patients.
Brachycephalic: upper airway syndrome (stenotic nares, elongated soft palate, everted saccules, redundant pharyngeal tissue, hypoplastic trachea. Hard to visualize rima glottidis due to elongated soft palate, everted saccules and redundant pharyngeal tissue.
cats: prone to laryngospasm, spray with lidocaine. May not incubate in castration
what is the first thing you should do after inserting the ET tube?
Hook up to 100% O2
The ______ or _______ is rapidly palpated after intubation to ensure your patient has not arrested
Apex beat or pulse
Why do we ascult both sides of chest soon after induction and intubation
ensure ET tube is not past carina, only inflating one lung
Describe how to tell if a dog or cat is too "light", too "deep" or at an appropriate depth of anesthesia according to eye position, palpebral, jaw tone
light: central eye position, present palpebral, jaw tone
deep: central eye position, no palpebral, no jaw tone
adequate: rotated eye position, no palpebral, some jaw tone
What five monitoring devices should be used on any dog or cat undergoing general anesthesia?
pulse oximeter
capnograph
BC oscillometer or doppler
ECG
Thermometer
When should a non-brachycephalic dog or cat be extubated? A brachycephalic dog or cat?
Once coughing or swelling strongly at least twice in a short period.
Brachycephalic: only when chewing, gagging and/or strongly coughing.
What should you look for or do right after extubation?
respriatory rate and pattern. Pulse ox on room air, take vital signs and assess pain
IF patient is having a rough recovery, what is the first thing to assess and treat for if needed?
Pain vs emergence delirium. Pain is ALERT and directed towards painful site. Delirium is staring into space, not directed towards site. If not sure, check for pain first.
Neuromuscular blocking agents
Hydrosoluble so peripheral only, no BBB
NO SEDATION OR ANALGESIA
muscle relaxants only - skeletal muscle, not smooth or cardiac. PARALYSIS, cannot breathe or move in response to pain.
Depolarizing (succinylcholine) or non-depolarizing (most, intermediate or long-acting)
NMJ physiology
Nerve synthesizes ACh, impulse causes release into synaptic cleft, binds to nicotinic receptor on post, causes conformational change, leading to end-plate potential and muscle contraction.
ACh hydrolized by AChE, reduces ACh, receptor ion channels close.
Nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents
MOST
bind to receptor to prevent interaction with ACh (competitive antagonists), so can be reversed by increasing ACh.
NOT hydrolyzed by AChE, so reversal depends on redistribution, metabolism, excretion (or reversal like edrophonium and neostigmine, inhibit AChE to increase ACh)
intermediate: atracurium, vecuronium, rocuronium
long: pancuronoium
neuromuscular block antagonists/reversal
Edrophonium or neostigmine. AChE inhibitors, allow ACh to build up in synaptic cleft to compete with NMBA.
Increases in ACh can cause CV complications so give with atropine or glycopyrrolate.
Ceiling effect, DEEP block cannot be antagonized
ALSO sugammadex - SELECTIVE relaxant binding agent - binds SPECIFICALLY to rocuronium/vecuronium/pancuronium
depolarizing neuromuscular blockers
succinylcholine resembles ACh
binds to receptor and generates an action potential - AGONIST
contraction/fasciculation then paralysis, doesn't let go. Hydrolyzed in plasma by pseudocholinesterase NOT AChE, no antagonist
Works in 30 seconds, faster than everything else.
monitoring
NECESSARY
peripheral nerve stimulator
Train of Four - twitch gets gradually less intense over time (fades).
When drug wears off, all four twitches equal
residual paralysis
Presence of undetected weakness after anesthesia
increases risk of aspiration, upper airway obstruction and hypoxia
mild can't be easily detected. Anesthetics and hypothermia also increase risks of residual paralysis
benzylisoquinolones (nondepolarizing NMBAs)
Atracurium, cisatracurium
can release histamine (tachycardia, hypotension, bronchospasm)
extra-hepatic metabolism
steroidal nondepolarizing NMBAs
Vecuronium, rocuronium
tend to be vagolytic
hepatic metabolism
renal excretion
Hoffman elimination
a spontaneous nonenzymatic chemical breakdown occurs at physiological pH and temperature
how atracurium is broken down
how is atracurium broken down
Hoffman elimination: a spontaneous nonenzymatic chemical breakdown occurs at physiological pH and temperature
ester hydrolysis: by nonspecific esterases
pharmacokinetics are independent of liver and renal function
Most anesthetic drugs _____________ CV function
Most disease of CV system are ____________ by anesthesia
depress CV
exacerbated
basal metabolic oxygen requirement
10 ml/kg/min
mixed venous oxygen and how it decreases (2)
normal mixed venous oxygen content
normal arterial oxygen content
measure of global balance between supply and demand of oxygen
goes down when EITHER O2 demand increases or O2 supply decreases
mixed venous oxygen content: ~15 ml/dl
arterial oxygen content: ~20 ml/dl
so the body uses 5mL of O2 from every 100mL of cardiac output
oxygen delivery formula
oxygen delivery = cardiac output x oxygen content of arterial blood
DO2 = Q x CO2
Cardiac Output = Q = stroke volume x heart rate
oxygen content formula
oxygen on hemoglobin + oxygen in simple solution
oxygen on hemoglobin
sigmoid curve designed to pick up large volume of oxygen in lung and unload it in tissues with a small drop in PaO2
very little PO2 in plasma (linear relationship, not sigmoid). Breathing 100% O2 increases by a TON, to become ~30% of body's needs, so this helps anemic patients a LOT
blood pressure analogous with what formula? CO formula
Ohm's Law for DC current
current = voltage/resistance
cardiac output = pressure drop / vascular resistance (so CO proportional to systmeic arterial pressure unless there are vasoconstrictors)
Feline Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
High myocardial O2 demand
often restricted outflow tract (high resistance to flow around aortic valve
poor pump function
increasing HR doesn't allow time for ventricular filling
Pericardial tamponade
big globular heart on radiographs
pericardium full of exudate/transudate (no compliance)
ventricles can't fill
atria can't "kick"
stroke volume low
aspirate the pericardial sac!
Equine respiratory rate
tidal volume
dead space in terms of tidal volume
~14/min
10-15 mL/kg
Vd/Vt ~ 60%, more than HALF is dead space!
enough pressure on inspiration to collapse airways or cause pulmonary edema, so lungs collapse under anesthesia due to position and lack of tone, and reopening is hard
V/Q mismatch more common in horses than others
equine HR, ABP, necessary MAP (and why), most common arrhythmias
HR 30-45
ABP 130/90 (100)
MAP <70 causes rhabdomyolysis
I-II AV blocks are common, AF most common arrhythmia
anesthetics cause hypotension due to vasodilation and poor contractility
Equine anesthesia prep
14g catheter in L jug
rinse mouth - they pack like chipmunks
>12h fasting to increase functional residual capacity and decreases tympanism (otherwise they FERMENT under anesthesia and bloat, can't breathe
careful if using K-Pen as abx, K too fast causes bradycardia and hypotension
sedatives for horses (4)
alpha-2: xylazine (least specific), detomidine, romifidine, dexmedetomidine (most specific). CV effects less severe than dogs/cats, so most common sedatives for equine. Stay standing.
phenothiazines: acepromazine, ataxia but stay up, alpha-1 blockade may cause hypotension, non-reversible, priaprism
Benzodiazepines: diazepam, midazolam, not great sedatives and can cause excitation, good in neonates or with ketamine.
opioids: combined to augment sedation, but constipation. Morphine good analgesic but colic/excitation. Torb is shorter and more mild, but fewer effects
USE XYLAZINE
induction and maintenance for equines
IV always through catheter! Can mask but only really for foals or research
Dissociatives: ketamine, usu with benzos. "slow", CV stability, moderate resp depressino, analgesia, but causes muscle rigidity
Inhalational: Iso most common, more hypotension than dog/cat. Usu add something to decrease MAC (ketamine, lidocaine, detomidine)
often SEVERE hypoventilation and lots of atelectasis so we use IPPV
"triple drip" in equines
guaifenesin (sometimes midaz), ketamine and xylazine
enough for short, not-complex procedures, used in field conditions
Inverted L block
ruminant DA, C-section etc
block down T13/L1, across top to L4
Takes a while to work and peritoneum may not get enough at first?
Lidocaine usually, SQ tunnel then three layers
Paravertebral blocks (2)
rumenotomy, DA, C-section
Proximal paravertebral nerve block: just lateral to vertebral dorsal spinous processes of T13, L1, L2
Distal paravertebral block: Dorsal and ventral to lateral vertebral processes
Intravenous regional blocks/"bier" blocks (4)
for amputation of a digit, don't use a ring block
tourniquet then inject into radial vein, palmar metacarpal vein and/or dorsal metacarpal vein, lateral saphenous for hind.
block for dehorning cattle
midway between canthus of eye and horn, gets auriculopalpebral and cornual branch of the zygomaticotemporal. May also put some in medial canthus of eye (infraorbital)
block for dehorning goats
DILUTE LIDOCAINE, more sensitive (doesn't last as long), get twitchy and neurological
inject midway between lateral canthus and ear (zygomaticotemporal) PLUS infratrochlear
caudal epidural block
peri- and intra-vaginal procedures
between 1st and 2nd coccigeal vertebrae with Tuohy needle
epidural for cattle, goats, sheep
lumbosacral space
In goats, spinal cord can extend longer so be careful
blocking teats in cattle (also testicles)
ring block
testicles: line block under skin and rest into testes
sedation of ruminants (2)
xylazine: most common in cattle - more sensitive than horses. Sheep more than cattle, goats more than sheep. SHEEP - pulmonary edema and hypoxemia, increased diffusion limitation
benzodiazepines: midaz/diaz with induction agents, can be used with butorphanol for sedation. OFTEN with torb in sheep
Ruminant GA and regurg/bloat
serious complications, so fast adult cattle 18-24h, water 6-8h.
fast small ruminants 6-12h, off water 2-3 hours
neonates miss one feed, they're essentially monogastric
don't use parasympatholytics, make saliva viscous
ruminant induction and ET tube
cast with casting rope first
IV induction with ketamine (usu + diazepam), propofol ($$$), guaiafenesin
intubate cow with gag and arm, physically palpate larynx. Small ruminants ET like dogs but LONG laryngoscope blade.
Wash out mouth before extubation because they DID regurg
camelids, ET tubes and catheters
spasm when you remove the tube, you have to just re-anesthetize and re-tube
Stop breathing sometimes.
Hard to get catheter in jug because of thick skin, no good veins in limbs.
difficulties with swine anesthesia
no handles, can't get at veins for injection, screaming! Weird trachea hard to work with, blind diverticulum in larynx, oval cricoid very narrow, malignant hyperthermia
swine sedation
oral diazepam in palatable vehicle
can use acepromazine or azaperone
swine anesthesia drugs
injectable anesthetics IM
Telazole: low volume and high therapeutic index, but very long recovery
Alpha2 + ketamine + opiate: most reliable
use these as chemical restraint then put a catheter in the ear vein, top with ketamine or propofol
malignant hyperthermia
Rare, genetic, mostly bred out
first sign is front legs extending and claws separating.
Temperature increases, resp rate increases, struggle, lactic acidosis, arrhythmias and death
discuss with owner FIRST
Main concerns of anesthesia
Maintain homeostasis,airwayandanalgesia
The key to practicing anesthesiaisto
understandphysiology and pathophysiology
pregnancy as co-morbidity
increased abdominal return: decreases venous return, reduces FRC (pressure on aorta and VC, weight doesn't let chest expand), increases risk of hypoxia
dilutional anemia
risk of hemorrhage (hyperperfused uterus)
progesterone decreases MAC (easier to OD)
lowers vascular resistance (prone to hypotension - progesterone increases to make it easier to perfuse uterus)
maintain MAP over 80mmHg (phenylephrine) to ensure blood can GET into cranium against pressure
Cushing's reflex
secondary to ICP, arterial BP increases then reflex bradycardia. Sudden hypertension and bradycardia in surgery means ICP IS INCREASING
Pressure that goes into brain depends on MAP and ICP, so keep MAP high
why diabetes matters for anesthesia
Hyperglycemia: increases density of blood (thicker), diuretic causing PUPD, both can cause dehydration
iatrogenic hypoglycemia: too much insulin without eating. NO symptoms show under anesthesia
SLOW gastric emptying time: increases risk of regurgitation and aspiration
cardiac autonomic neuropathy: may not respond/compensate as well
potential renal disease: long-term diabetes due to hyperglycemia = tubular necrosis
DKA: no insulin = no glucose = fat for energy = ketones = acidosis
FASTING: early sx, fast overnight. Late, feed a wet meal with motilin in the morning. Measure and decide on insulin.
Repeated BG and acid-base monitoring throughout sx.
anesthetic concerns with sepsis
painful!
Peritoneal fluid = compression = hypoxia
vomiting = aspiration, acid/base
vasodilation! So decreased renal perfusion and dehydration/hypovolemia
sedation/pain control without emesis (opioids, supplement with O2), quick induction to prevent aspiration, low MAC or TIVA to minimize vasodilation
optimize pre-surgery
TIVA
method of inducing and maintaining general anesthesia exclusively by intravenously administered drugs
pros/cons of TIVA
pros: superior recovery profile, portable delivery system, less OR pollution
cons: expensive, best drugs/delivery systems not always available, no reliable technique for monitoring plasma concentration
TIVA that produces all components of anesthesia in therapeutic dose
there isn't one
target controlled infusion
new method of TIVA administration, aims for a target blood concentration - does the math for you, starts with higher dose and titrates down. Doesn't MEASURE, just based on math.
drugs for TIVA
propofol (NO repeated 3 days in cats or heinz body anemia, maybe motor activity in dogs?)
fentanyl
dexmedetomidine
detomidine-guaiphenein-ketamine
T/F: Propofol (unless it’s Propoflo 28TM) must be discarded six hours after the bottle is opened because it supports bacterial growth.
true
What is propofol’s mechanism of action?
Decreases rate of dissociation of GABA from GABA-A receptors
Name two reasons why propofol has a short duration of action
Rapid redistribution to other tissues like fat and rapid metabolism (liver, lungs)
What are the CNS effects of propofol
Decreases cerebral metabolic rate for O2, cerebral blood flow and intracranial pressure
What are the CV effects of propofol
Decreased myocardial contractility and vasodilation = hypotension, blunts baroreceptor reflex
T/F: Propofol stimulates ventilation
true
what effect does propofol have on intraocular pressure
decrease
Propofol can cause which hematological condition if given repeatedly over days?
Oxidative injury to RBC = Heinz body anemia
The dissociative anesthetics are antagonists at the _________ receptor but appear to have other effects too
NMDA
T/F: The dissociative anesthetics produce intense analgesia, and ketamine is used as a CRI for pain
True - ketamine
What is special about ketamine in the cat
Excreted unchanged by kidneys mostly
What are the CNS effects of the dissociative anesthetics
Seizures, increased cerebral blood flow and intracranial pressure, emergence delirium/hallucinations
What are the CV effects of dissociative anesthetics
Indirect CV stimulation, direct myocardial depression
What are the respiratory effects of the dissociative anesthetics
Don't depress ventilation as much as protocol, bronchodilator, pharyngeal/laryngeal reflexes maintained
what is the MOA of etomidate
Enhances affinity of GABA for GABA-A (no analgesic)
Enhances affinity of GABA for GABA-A (no analgesic)
Hydrolysis by hepatic microsomes like enzymes and plasma set erases, excreted in urine and bile
Main clinical use of etomidate
IV induction of general anesthesia
especially good for CV patients (also renal, hepatic, hypovolemic)
T/F: Etomidate can cause hemolysis because it is dissolved in propylene glycol
True
What is the major endocrine side effect of etomidate
Adrenocortical suppression
Which induction agent is classified as a neurosteroid?
What happens if a barbiturate is accidentally administered outside the vein
Tissue sloughing
Advantages and disadvantages of inhalant inductions
Minimally metabolized so decrease liver burden, don't have to inject
no rapid control of airway, stressful, excitement phase if not premed, can vomit/regurgitate and we don't have airway control
in which patients are opioid inductions most commonly performed
Moribund (extreme CV stability)
Is fasting always necessary in small mammals that don't vomit?
no, possibly a short fast for a GI surgery, etc. Fasting could be detrimental in some species (rabbits, guinea pigs)
T/F: Fasting can actually be detrimental to the GI tract in some species
true - rabbits, guinea pigs
T/F: Fasting can lead to dehydration and hypoglycemia in many small mammals
true
T/F: Fasting has no negative consequences in pregnant animals
FALSE, dehydration and hypoglycemia
T/F: some species hide food in their cheek pouches, making fasting challenging and possibly leading to aspiration
true
T/F: in species that practice coprophagy, removing their food may not completely empty their stomach
true
Name 2-3 methods of restraint for ferrets, rabbits, rodents
ferrets: scruffing, wrapping in towel, muzzle
rabbits: scruffing, wrapping in towel, restrain pelvic limbs to prevent vertebral column fracture
rodents: scruffing, cupping in hands, tapered plastic film tubes with breathing hole, purpose-build restrainers
T/F: the vena cava can be used to collect blood in ferrets
true, cranial vena cava
name two sites on the head where blood can be collected in mice and rats
superficial temporal vein and retroorbital venous plexus
Rabbits have circulating __________ in plasma that cause atropine to have unpredictable effects on heart rate
atropinases
Most small mammals require _________ systems for delivery of oxygen and inhalant because dead space is too high in the circle/rebreathing systems
nonrebreathing
Name the features of the rabbit upper airway that make intubation challenging (4)
epiglottis dorsal to soft palate
mouth doesn't open widely
larynx caudal and ventral to angle of mandible
butterfly-shaped epiglottis
Name the various methods of rabbit intubation (5)
blind while listening for airflow and looking for condensation
blind with capnograph
visual with or without guide tube
retrograde
nasotracheal
The _________ of guinea pigs and chinchillas connects the oropharynx to the pharynx and is highly vascular, making it prone to trauma and hemorrhage during intubation
palatal ostium (fusion of soft palate to base of tongue)
Name two ways to intubate mice and rats
otoscope and guide tube
fiberoptic endoscope
The _________ is a supraglottic airway device made for rabbits
V-gel (laryngeal cup)
A sustained-release preparation of which opioid is commonly used in small mammals?
buprenorphine
__________ staining in rats could be a sign of pain
porphyrin
ID as many signs of pain in animals as possible
reduced activity
altered posture or gait
arched back, short stride
decreased urination and defecation
hide in corners
reduced grooming
porphyrin staining
change in temperment
vocalizations
reduced eating/drinking and weight loss/dehydration
increase in HR, change in RR, shock
Name 2-3 challenges of anesthetizing zoo, wild, exotic patients
may have no history, PE, diagnostics
few protocols for many species
stressful induction
environmental hazards
difficult to provide supportive care and monitoring
limited knowledge of physiology and pharmacology
Name 2-3 risks to human safety associated with zoo/wildlife/exotics
physical trauma
zoonotic disease
danger from other animals in area/herd
immobilization drugs
capture technique (helicopters)
environmental hazards
What are some ways veterinarians can prevent human injury or treat it if it occurs?
communicate
understand the target species
be familiar with your environment
know location of emergency medical services
wear PPE
handle drugs carefully and with a buddy
have antagonists available
only experienced people should handle delivery equipment
Name some factors to consider when selecting the free-ranging wild animal immobilization environment
time of year and day
weather/climate
terrain
equipment
capture technique (physical, chemical, both)
target vs non-target animals
Name some of the qualities of an ideal immobilization drug/drug combination
rapid onset
high margin of safety
handler safety
small volume
produces hypnosis
reversibility
versatility
stability
a body temperature greater than _________ degrees celcius is generally considered dangerous in immobilized wildlife
41 (=105.8F)
What are some ways to prevent and treat hyperthermia in immobilized wildlife?
avoid capture in hot ambient temps, avoid stress or prolonged pursuit, minimize physical restraint, protect from sun