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Village Vet Home > Medical
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Anesthetic Risk
Many procedures
in veterinary medicine require anesthesia. In fact, this is more
often true than it is in human medicine since our patients don't
voluntarily hold still for any length of time. The main risk
involved with most procedures that require anesthesia is the
anesthesia, not the procedure we are performing. This is why
you are asked to sign consent forms for any procedure that might
require anesthesia.
Most anesthetic
drugs depress the cardiovascular(heart) and respiratory(lung)
systems. These drugs are detoxified and eliminated by a combination
of the lungs, liver and kidneys.
Although
anesthetic risk cannot be totally eliminated, we can reduce it
to a very low level. We do this in many ways:
Physical examination: All animals undergoing anesthesia
at Village Veterinary Hospital receive a same day exam with special
attention to organs and systems affected by anesthesia. This
is true even if your pet was seen here the day before since we
know that some problems can devolop literally overnight. Other
problems can come and go such as heart arrhythmias, escaping
detection at one physical, but revealing themselves at the next.
Pre-anesthetic Blood Tests: We strongly recommend that
all pets get blood tests before anesthesia. Senior pets 8 years
and older are often required to get blood tests before anesthesia.
Blood tests help us detect anesthetic (and surgery) risks that
we could not find on the physical exam. To save you the inconvenience
of an extra trip here, we have a laboratory in the hospital where
we can perform these tests the same day as surgery. These tests
include:
- Kidney and liver tests - these organs must detoxify and eliminate
many anesthetics
- Tests for dehydration - this problem reduces circulation
and increases risk of shock
- Electrolytes - if these are abnormal, heart arrhythmias and
cardiac arrest can result
- Red blood cells - if these are low, oxygen delivery to vital
organs can be compromised
- White bloods cells - these are important for fighting infection
- Platelets - these are needed for clotting(stopping bleeding)
in traumatic procedures
Other diagnostic tests: If we find abnormalities on
the physical exam or pre-anesthetic blood tests, your pet may
need additional tests to determine the nature and severity of
the problem. These may include urine analysis, electrocardiogram,
radiographs(xrays), ultrasound or additional blood tests.
Intravenous catheter: We recomend these for all pets.
This is a small tube that we can place in the vein before or
during anesthesia. Anesthetic emergencies are rare, but when
they occur, blood pressure is usually low which makes it difficult
to find veins to deliver emergency drugs quickly. A catheter
in the vein gives us a way to deliver emergency drugs quickly
regardless of our ability to find the veins.
Doctor participation: It is legal in the state of California
for a licensed veterinary technician to perform an entire anesthetic
as long as a veterinarian is in the facility. In many hospitals,
a veterinarian is never directly involved in anesthesia for xrays,
dental cleaning or other procedures that do not require a veterinarian.
However, at Village Veterinary Hospital, a doctor participates
directly in every anesthesia. The doctor has six more years of
scientific and medical education than a technician. We feel this
enhances your pet's anesthetic safety.
Anesthetic drug protocols: Most anesthesias use an
injectable drug to start anesthesia. In very short procedures,
this may be all that is needed. In longer anesthetics we switch
your pet to isoflourane gas anesthesia. This is widely considered
the safest gas anesthetic in the veterinary profession. Because
anesthetic can decrease heart rate, we also premedicate patients
with an injection that counteracts this effect.
Monitoring: Most anesthetic emergencies start with
respiratory arrest (the patient stops breathing). If they are
caught at this stage, it is usually easy to reverse the situation
with assisted breathing to maintain oxygen delivery. However,
if this is not noticed, low oxygen levels will lead to cardiac
arrest from which it is much more difficult to save the patient.
Consequently,
it is drilled into every doctor and employee to watch the breathing
of pets under anesthesia very closely, even if they are not participating
in the procedure and are just passing through the room. Heart
rate and the depth of anesthesia are also monitored.
While
direct observation of the patient is at the foundation of anesthetic
monitoring, we also use a pulse oximeter for many cases to supplement
our observations. The pulse oximeter gives numerical measurments
of heart rate and blood oxygen levels.
Thermal support: Anesthesia can also compromise a small,
short haired, or ill pet's ability to maintain normal body temperature.
Temperature monitoring and hot water bottles, heating pads and
blankets are used as needed.
Individualized anesthetic protocols: Of course every
patient's drug doses are adjusted for body weight, age or any
other factor that affects anesthetic drug doses. The drugs used
are modified as well in some cases. In addition, if we find problems
in the pre-anesthetic evaluation, we take steps to reduce anesthetic
risk associated with those problems. The most common precaution
is fluid treatment of pets with dehydration, kidney or liver
abnormalities. Fluid treatment involves injecting fluid either
under the skin or in a vein. It is absorbed into the body and
helps maintain blood pressure as well as helping the body to
eliminate anesthetic drugs.
Delaying anesthesia: When serious problems are detected
in the pre-anesthetic evaluation, the doctor may recommend delaying
anesthesia until those problems are resolved. We know this can
be an inconvenience for pet owners with busy schedules, but our
first priority is your pet's well being.
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