Anaesthesia: Monitoring Small Animals and Equine Practicals Flashcards

1
Q

How would you monitor anaesthesia in a 12 year old TBX mare with colic for exploratory laparotomy?

A

Systemically compromised individual- acid base disturbances, electrolyte imbalences, likely abnormal fluid balence
Unkown pathology
Unpredictable length of procedure

Basic techniques with- ECG, Capnography, Invasive arterial pressure monitoring, ideally with blood gas analysis

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2
Q

Can you name these devices?

A
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3
Q

How would you monitor anaesthesia in a 12 mo pony for routine castration at owners?

A

Basic monitoring techniques only

Should be a healthy animal undergoing a short, uncomplicated procedure of predictable duration

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4
Q

What are the advantages and disadvantages of invasive and non-invasive blood pressure monitoring?

A

Invasive:

Give real time, continuous readings
Require aterial cannulation
Only accurate for mean AP
Electronic expensive

Non invasive:

Variable acuracies
Doppler measures return of flow following occlusion
Require correct size and application of cuff
Intemittent readings

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5
Q

What information is given by invasive arterial blood pressure monitoring?

A

Gives diastolic pressure, systolic pressure and mean pressure

But because it gives a pressure time graph additional information can be gained:

  • Myocardial contractility- how steep the upstroke is
  • Systemic vascular resistance- how quickly the trace drops back down from max value
  • Volume status- all the peaks are the same height
  • Most will estimate HR
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6
Q

What are the normal values for systolic pressure, diastollic pressure and mean pressure with blood pressure monitoring?

A

Systolic- 80-130mmHg

Diastolic pressure- 40-60mmHg

Mean pressure- >60mmHg

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7
Q

What do you think of this invasive blood pressure reading?

A

Extremely hypotensive animal

Peaks of different heights suggest animal is hypovolaemic which will be contributing to this

Requires immediate attention

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8
Q

What is suspicious about the above reading and how could it be resolved?

A

The trace is typical of an arterial cannula being occluded by a thrombus or becoming kinked

Flushing and/or repositioning of the cannula should restore the trace and values to reflect the true situation.

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9
Q

What does capnography inform you about during anaesthesia?

A

Ventilation- end tidal CO2 is used as a surrogate, non-invasive mesurement of arterial CO2

Circulation- there needs to be efficient system to transport CO2 from cells to lungs. If end tidal CO2 drops it may indicate circular failure

Metabolism- sudden increases in ETCO2 may indicate a hypermetabolic state

Equipment faults- sudden absence of ETCO2 may be the first indicator of extubation or disconnection of endotracheal tube/capnography

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10
Q

What do the following capnograms tell you?X

A

A- rebreathing CO2- capnorgram doesn’t return to baseline between breaths, most likely causes are soda lime depletion or inadequate fresh gas flow

C- mild hypoventilation- ETCO2 is slightly high

E- Normal capnogram- shape WNL

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11
Q

What do the following capnograms tellyou?

A

B- Double respiratory pattern- typical of an animal being mechanically ventilated and taking spontaneous breaths in between

D- Progressive hypoventilation- slight rebreathing- starts normal but peaks gradually increase

F- Cardiogenic oscillations- intrathoracic pressure fluctuations caused by myocardial contractions can sometimes be detected as a jagged return of capnogram

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12
Q

What are the three components of the ECG and what happens during each?

A

P wave- atrial depolarisation

QRST complex- ventricular depolarisation

T- ventricular repolarisation

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13
Q

What could cause a 2nd degree AV block?

What treatmenr would you give if BP was normal or low?

A

Drugs- metomidine (opioids)

Increased vagal tone- anaesthetic agents

High resting vagaltone- fit animal

If BP normal- none

If BP was low- antagonise metomidine, give parasympatholytics

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14
Q
A
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15
Q

Didn’t finish monitoring of SA- cba- cheers future Patrick

A

Hope you’re feeling better

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