A 14‐year‐old Irish sport horse presented to our institution with a history of right forelimb lameness and left‐sided back pain. Radiography and nuclear scintigraphy were performed under sedation and the horse was diagnosed with overriding dorsal spinous processes, also known as kissing spine syndrome. Surgical treatment consisted of dorsal spinous process ostectomy and desmotomy under general anaesthesia. This case report summarises the perianaesthetic management, which included an erector spinae plane block as part of a multimodal analgesic approach.
A three‐year‐old, male neutered, 2.7 kg Chihuahua was referred for correction of a type IIA, left‐to‐right shunting PDA. The correction of the PDA required two separate interventions. During the first intervention, a minimally invasive transvascular correction of the PDA that was converted to a thoracotomy was suspended after the evidence of iatrogenic haemopericardium. The second intervention, scheduled after the resolution of the haemopericardium, consisted of surgical ligation of the PDA via thoracotomy. Long periods of hypotension (mean arterial pressure below 60 mm Hg) were observed during the first intervention, during which anaesthesia was maintained with a combination of sevoflurane and infusions of fentanyl and lidocaine. The use of total intravenous anaesthesia with alfaxalone in conjunction with locoregional techniques in the second intervention provided smooth anaesthesia with improved cardiovascular stability.
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