The proximal paravertebral nerve block is commonly used to provide anaesthesia to the flank during standing surgical procedures in adult cattle. It has been reported that additional anaesthetic infiltration may be necessary to provide complete anaesthesia. In humans as well as animal species, another technique—the ultrasound (US)-guided erector spinae plane block (ESPB)—has been described. The goal of the present study was to develop and investigate an US-guided ESPB in comparison to a blind proximal paravertebral nerve block (PPNB) in cow cadavers. In 10 cadaver specimens, injections of methylene blue-lidocaine (1:1) were performed at the level of T13, L1 and L2 vertebras, on one side doing an ESPB block and, on the other side, a PPNB. Five cadavers were injected with high (40 mL per injection for PPNB and 20 mL for ESPB) and five with low (20 and 15 mL, respectively) volumes of injectate. For the ESPB, the ultrasound probe was oriented craniocaudally, and the ventral-cranial aspect of the articular processes (T13, L1 and L2) was targeted for injection. The dye spreading was evaluated by dissection. The landmarks for US-guided injection were easily visualized; however, injections were accidentally performed at T12, T13 and L1. Nevertheless, L2 was stained in 60% of ESPBs. Epidural spreading was observed with both techniques and all volumes. Viscera puncture was reported in two PPNBs. The ESPB resulted in similar nerve staining compared to the PPNB while using a lower volume of injectate. Even better staining is expected with a T13-L2 instead of a T12-L1 ESPB approach. Further studies are warranted to evaluate the clinical efficacy.
A 17-year-old, domestic, entire, male, miniature donkey with a history of syncope because of sinus bradycardia, high-grade second degree and occasional third degree atrioventricular block was referred for pacemaker implantation under general anaesthesia. After local anaesthesia with topical EMLA cream and subcutaneous mepivacaine infiltration and following tranquilisation with intravenous acepromazine, a temporary pacing catheter was inserted via introducer catheter through the left jugular vein into the right ventricle's apex. After initiation of internal pacing, medetomidine and butorphanol were administered intravenously, followed by ketamine and diazepam. Maintenance of anaesthesia was with isoflurane combined with medetomidine and lidocaine constant-rate infusions. Intramuscular morphine and intravenous medetomidine were administered for recovery. The procedure was uneventful with no anaesthesia-related complications, and manually assisted recovery was smooth. The present report describes the anaesthetic challenges and management of pacemaker implantation under general anaesthesia in a miniature donkey.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.