
Manual of Equine Anesthesia and Analgesia
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Manual of Equine Anesthesia and Analgesia
About this book
A fully updated new edition of this?practical guide to managing anesthesia in horses?and other equids, providing?updated and expanded information?in?a concise, easy-to-read format?
Manual of Equine Anesthesia and Analgesia ?provides practitioners and veterinary students with?concise, highly practical?guidance to?anesthetizing horses, ?donkeys, ?and mules.?Using a bulleted quick-reference format, ?this popular?resource?covers?the?basic physiological and pharmacological?principles of?anesthesia, ?patient?preparation?and?monitoring, ?and the management of sedation and?anesthesia. Chapters written by leading veterinary anesthesiologists?contain numerous clinical images?and?illustrations, case examples, tables, diagrams, and?boxed?summaries of?important?points.?
Now in full color, the?second?edition?features extensively?revised and?updated?information throughout. New?sections cover?chronic pain, management of horses undergoing MRI, ventilators, nerve blocks for reproductive surgery, muscle relaxants, various?new drugs, paravertebral?anesthesia, treatment of pain using acupuncture and physical rehabilitation techniques, ?and more. Up-to-date?appendices?contain?drug lists and dosages as well as equations related to equine cardiovascular?and respiratory systems.?This?concise, easy-to-follow?guide: ?
- Provides?practical, clinically oriented information on anesthetizing?equids??
- Uses a bulleted format?designed?for fast access?of key information?
- Offers?step-by-step?instructions?and diagrams?of nerve blocks of the limbs, head, and ophthalmic structures??
- Includes new coverage of topics including regulation of?extracellular?fluid and?blood?pressure, ?acid-base disorders, and?hemodynamic effects of autonomic drugs?
Manual of Equine Anesthesia and Analgesia, Second Edition, ?remains a must-have resource for?all?equine practitioners?and?veterinary students?involved with anesthetizing horses.?
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Information
1
Preoperative Evaluation and Patient Preparation
The Risk of Equine Anesthesia
- Risks of equine anesthesia have been linked with various conditions and situations and are reviewed in detail elsewhere and summarized in this chapter.
I Risk of equine anesthesia
- Anesthesia of the horse always involves an assessment of risk.
- Potential complications range from the less serious (e.g. skin wounds) to the more serious (e.g. long bone fractures, myopathies, and peripheral neuropathies), and to death in some cases.
- There is also risk of injury to personnel and safe handling should be practiced.
- The goal of the anesthetist is to minimize the adverse effects (ideally at minimum cost) by:
- Identifying and defining the risk(s).
- Selecting the best strategy for controlling or minimizing the risk(s).
- Data from single clinics have cited mortality rates of 0.24–1.8% in healthy horses.
- Data from multicenter studies cite the death rate for healthy horses undergoing anesthesia at around 0.9% (approximately 1 : 100).
- The overall death rate, when sick horses undergoing emergency colic surgery are included, has been reported to be 0.12% when fatalities were directly related to anesthesia in one study, and 1.9% in another study.
II Classification of physical status (see Box 1.1)
- Classification of health status is generally based on the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) system.
- This system uses information from the history, physical examination, and laboratory findings to place horses into one of five categories.
- The classification allows for standardization of physical status only.
- The ASA system does not classify risk, although increased risk of complication is associated with a high ASA status.
- These classifications are not always useful for horses: nevertheless, the system serves as a guide to case management.
Box 1.1 ASA Classification System
| ASA 1 | Healthy horse does not require intervention (e.g. castration). |
| ASA 2 | Horse with mild systemic disease (e.g. mild anemia, mild recurrent airway obstruction) or localized injury (e.g. wound repair). |
| ASA 3 | Horse with moderate systemic disease (e.g. stable colic, infected joint). |
| ASA 4 | Horse with severe systemic disease (e.g. recent ruptured bladder, endotoxemia). |
| ASA 5 | A moribund horse not expected to survive longer than 24 hours (e.g. unstable colic, ruptured bladder of several days duration). |
| E | The letter E is added to status 2–5 under emergency conditions. |
III Risk factors
A Age and physical status
- The risk increases with age, and horses aged 12 years or older are at an increased risk of mortality.
- Older horses may be more prone to fracture of a long bone in the recovery period, which could result in euthanasia.
- Foals have an increased risk of fatality and this is probably associated with unfamiliarity with neonatal anesthesia, an immature cardiovascular system, and presence of systemic illness.
- Pregnant mares have increased risk of mortality in the last trimester of pregnancy and this is probably associated with a need for emergency surgery. Otherwise, there is no difference between sexes.
- Horses with a high ASA physical status have increased risk of mortality.
B Type of surgery and recovery
- In otherwise healthy horses, the risk of mortality (euthanasia) following fracture repair is highest from repair failure or from fracture of another bone.
- However, long periods of anesthesia typical of fracture repair have also been associated with increased mortality, and horses presented for fracture repair may be dehydrated and stressed.
- Emergency surgery (non‐colic) carries a 4.25 times higher risk of mortality compared with elective surgery, and for emergency abdominal surgery the risk of fatality is 11.7%.
- Colic surgery is associated with increased mortality because of a higher ASA physical status, emergency procedure with less time for stabilization, and use of dorsal recumbency possibly with episodes of hypotension.
- Eye surgery, in one institution, resulted in longer recovery times and risk of complications and were associated with long anesthesia time compared to non‐ophthalmic procedures. Fluconazole (microso...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Table of Contents
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Preoperative Evaluation and Patient Preparation
- 2 Serum Chemistry and Hematology
- 3 The Cardiovascular System
- 4 The Respiratory System
- 5 The Renal System
- 6 Neurophysiology and Neuroanesthesia
- 7 The Autonomic Nervous System
- 8 Electrolyte and Fluid Therapy
- 9 Acid‐Base Physiology
- 10 Hemostasis and Hemotherapy
- 11 Thermoregulation
- 12 Pharmacology of Drugs Used in Equine Anesthesia
- 13 Inhalational Anesthetics
- 14 Local Anesthetics
- 15 Neuromuscular Blocking Agents in Horses
- 16 Non‐steroidal Anti‐Inflammatory Drugs and Corticosteroids
- 17 Anesthetic Machines and Equipment
- 18 Positioning the Anesthetized Horse
- 19 Monitoring the Anesthetized Horse
- 20 Standing Sedation
- 21 General Anesthesia Techniques
- 22 Anesthesia of the Head and Neck
- 23 Anesthesia of the Eye
- 24 Anesthesia of the Limbs
- 25 Anesthesia of the Perineum and Testicle
- 26 Anesthesia of the Abdominal Wall
- 27 Epidural Analgesia and Anesthesia
- 28 Pathophysiology of Pain
- 29 Pain Recognition in Horses
- 30 Management of Pain
- 31 Anesthesia of Foals
- 32 Anesthesia of Horses with Intestinal Emergencies (Colic)
- 33 Anesthesia of the Geriatric Horse
- 34 Anesthesia and Pregnancy
- 35 Anesthesia for Equine Imaging
- 36 Anesthesia of Donkeys and Mules
- 37 Remote Capture of Equids
- 38 Complications
- 39 Recovery from Anesthesia
- 40 Euthanasia
- Index
- End User License Agreement