9. Anesthesia of Small Mammals Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in 9. Anesthesia of Small Mammals Deck (25)
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1
Q

______ anesthetic risk

A

higher

2
Q

Learning objective:

Be aware of physiologic differences and concerns compared to larger species

A

Rabbits, lagomorphs don’t vomit, ferrets do.

ferret heart is super far back in thorax.

? What else to add ?

3
Q

Learning objective:

know general considerations for equipment and monitoring

A

anesthesia machine with nonrebreathing system (lower resistance for small patients)
- bain block recommended to see pressure in system.
- uncuffed ET tubes
- various facemask sizes
Monitoring:
1. doppler/pulse/auscultate; can do art line/indirect BP
2. ECG
3. resp rate/character. ensure NECK IS EXTENDED, can use mainstream capnography (neonatal to minimize dead space)
4. ventilator
5. prone to hypothermia, bubble wrap/bair hugger/heat pad
6. depth (same as dogs)

4
Q

Learning objective:

know typical patient considerations, fasting times, drugs commonly used

A
  • Don’ t fast lagomorphs, rabbits, rodents. Fast ferrets 2-4 hours.
  • opioids with benzo in general
  • mask induction or IV
5
Q

metabolic rate
O2 demand?
dosing?
in small mammals

A

higher than larger animals (allometric scaling)

  • higher O2 demand, get hypoxic faster, so pre-oxygenate
  • higher doses for drugs
6
Q

lagomorphs and rodents are unable to _____ due to stomach conformation. so you don’t need to _____ them.

A

vomit.

don’t fast.

7
Q

These animals get stressed easily. have a ___ room with ____ available. Only handle them when necessary.

A

quiet room with incubators available

8
Q

popular analgesic premeds and doses are _____-specific

A

species

9
Q

in general most prevalent anagesic are ___ and ___. Premedication is to facilitate ___________ via mask. Can also induce with injectables (some species can use IM/Intraperitoneal induction routes)

A

nsaid and opioids.

inhalant induction.

10
Q

(rabbits, lagomorphs, rodents) intubation can be challenging. _____ the neck.

Options for intubation?

A

hyper extend the neck.

  1. Blind intubation (don’t use too many attemps)
  2. laryngoscope/otoscope (hard to see when tube is added, can use stylet in trachea then intubate)
  3. Endoscope-assisted
  4. retrograde intubation (needle into larynx, then use catheter thru needle and out mouth, then use as guide wire)
  5. Just use mask if something quick, use tight fitting mask with minimal dead space.
11
Q

how to confirm ET tube placement?

A
  • auscultate both sides of thorax
  • feel/look for breath and condensation in ET tube.
  • ideally use capnography to confirm
12
Q

handling rabbits?

A

support hind end!

13
Q

blood access in rabbits/lagomorphs?

A

marginal ear vein
ephalic
intraosseus

14
Q

endogenous atropinases?

A

so use glycopyrollate instead of atropine in rabbits.

15
Q

premeds rabbits/lagomorphs/rodents?

A

opioid and benzo

alfaxalone IM also good if need more sedation. (avoid full mu to prevent ileus)

16
Q

rabbits/lagomorphs induction?

A

inhalant induction common, or use propofol/alfaxalone IV

17
Q

rabbits/lagomorphs maintenance of anesthesia?

A

usually inhalant, can use TIVA

18
Q

V-gel?

A

secure airway, sits on top of glotis, cool new thing

19
Q

rodents also have a high ________. Which makes them prone to hypoxia, need higher drug doses. They also have low _____, so may get hypoglycemic.

A

metabolic rate

glycogen stores

20
Q

vascular access

A

jug, cephalic, saphenous, lateral coccygeal vein

or intraosseus

21
Q

SC and IM irritant drugs may cause

A

self mutilation

22
Q

blood sampling in ferrets

A
  • jug, cephalic, saphenous, Cr. VC if under anesthesia because heart is so FAR BACK
  • vascular access in cephalic vein, saph, or IO
23
Q

______ disease is not as common in ferrets.

A

respiratory

24
Q

______, ____, and _____ are prevalent diseases in ferrets

A

cardiac, adrenal, insulinoma

25
Q

GI transit time in ferrets

A

short, 4 hours

FAST 2-4 hrs.