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Animal Care Learning Module -
Surgery
Principles of Preoperative Management |
The well-being of the animal and validity of the study are enhanced by proper management before the operative procedure.
Animal health status — The health status of animals should be assessed before undergoing a surgical procedure. Evaluation of blood, urine, and feces can be helpful, depending on the animal species and health history of the animal or colony. Health assessments are usually conducted during a quarantine period when the animals are kept separate from conditioned animals. The quarantine period of random source animals is generally a few weeks duration, in part since these animals may need to be immunized against common infectious diseases. Purpose bred animals also require quarantine, but the period is much shorter.
Conditioning — It is important that animals be provided a period of adaptation prior to undergoing surgical procedures. This allows the animal's physiologic and metabolic systems to stabilize to a new environment thereby minimizing risk of complications; this period also minimizes the effects of uncontrolled environmental influences on the results obtained from the experimental protocol.
Animal stress — Investigators and research staff should be familiar with the normal behavior of the species and recognize abnormal behaviors. Since distress can alter experimental results, efforts should be targeted to reduce stresses associated with survival surgery, prolonged studies, confinement, and chronic pain.
Proper handling and restraint — will help prevent injury and minimize stress, to both the animal and personnel! Consultation with the veterinarian is advised.
Antimicrobial prophylaxis — might be indicated prophylactically for certain surgical procedures or when known breaks in sterility occur, but should not be used as a substitute for proper aseptic techniques. Please consult the veterinarian about using antimicrobials for each individual animal.
Principles of Anesthetic Management — Prevention of perceived pain during surgery is the primary function of anesthesia. Anesthesia also enables humane restraint, improves safety, and increases technical efficiency. Although many factors affect choice of a particular anesthetic drug or technique, the greatest concern must be the well-being of the animal. A general rule of thumb is “aim only for the degree of restraint and anesthesia required” - more may not be better and often is associated with a greater potential for adverse effects.
Criteria for choosing anesthetic agents
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Anesthetic & Analgesia Definitions
General Anesthesia provides overall insensitivity and unconsciousness. Basic elements of general anesthesia include:
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Two main delivery systems are used in veterinary medicine, inhalation and injection; a brief review of common drugs follows:
Inhalation anesthetics are gaseous or volatile agents administered via the respiratory tract. Inhalation anesthetics, when properly administered allow one to control and regulate anesthetic depth. Disadvantages include need for specialized delivery equipment and potential toxicosis to personnel chronically exposed to anesthetic vapors. Endotracheal intubation facilitates effective and safe delivery of inhalation anesthetics. A waste gas scavenging system should be used to minimize exposure to personnel. Examples include: ether, halothane, methoxyflurane, and isoflurane.
Injectable anesthetics can serve as the sole anesthetic agent, be used to induce anesthesia before inhalation anesthesia, or supplement regional anesthesia. To minimize the chance of drug overdose and to reduce drug-related tissue damage, drugs used for smaller (<4 kg) laboratory animals may need to be diluted.
Local and Regional Anesthesia — is used most often in large animals, such as horses, cattle or sheep. Localized insensitivity in awake or mildly sedated animals can result from topical application or injection of appropriate anesthetics in the region of the surgical incision (local anesthesia); injection in proximity to nerve trunks (nerve block); or injection into the subarachnoid or epidural spaces (regional anesthesia).
Local and regional anesthesia advantages include:
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Local and regional anesthesia disadvantages Include:
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Consultation with the attending veterinarian is recommended since there is tremendous variation between species as to their response to analgesic drugs. Limited animal studies have been conducted and for many species there will be widely different published dosage schedules. Never extrapolate from human data, please consult with the veterinarian.
Guidelines for the administration of analgesics
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In addition to the care which must be taken when choosing the proper dosage and schedule for a particular species, different analgesics are indicated for different types of pain:
Management of Drugs — Drugs which are considered by the U.S. Department of Justice, Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) to be controlled substances must be stored in a locked cabinet in a secured area (e.g. behind two locked doors). Controlled substances must never be left unattended since the potential for theft and misuse of these drugs is high. In the past, the DEA allowed some latitude in research facilities and did not closely observe who exactly administered these drugs to the research animal. This is no longer true. Therefore, each investigator with a DEA license must personally supervise the administration of these drugs. In addition, Animal Care staff may no longer transfer controlled drugs to research staff.
All drugs, whether or not they are DEA regulated, must be properly labeled and included on the label must be the expiration date. Expiration dates should be checked periodically, at least once every three months, and expired drugs immediately discarded. It is a violation to use expired drugs on animals involved in research procedures (there are a few limited occasions wherein expired drugs may be used for terminal, non-survival procedures). Animal Care staff will discard any drug they observe to be improperly labeled, or in use after the expiration date has passed. At the minimum the label on a drug shall include:
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