Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine (Jul 2020)

Association between anesthesia duration and outcome in dogs with surgically treated acute severe spinal cord injury caused by thoracolumbar intervertebral disk herniation

  • Joe Fenn,
  • Hongyu Ru,
  • Nick D. Jeffery,
  • Sarah Moore,
  • Andrea Tipold,
  • Franz J. Soebbeler,
  • Adriano Wang‐Leandro,
  • Christopher L. Mariani,
  • Peter J. Early,
  • Karen R. Muñana,
  • Natasha J. Olby

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/jvim.15796
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 34, no. 4
pp. 1507 – 1513

Abstract

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Abstract Background Retrospective research recently identified a possible relationship between duration of surgery and outcome in severely affected dogs treated surgically for acute thoracolumbar intervertebral disk herniation (TL‐IVDH). Hypothesis That increased duration of surgery is associated with poorer outcome in dogs with absent pain perception treated surgically for TL‐IVDH. Animals Two hundred ninety‐seven paraplegic dogs with absent pain perception surgically treated for acute TL‐IVDH. Methods Retrospective cohort study. Medical records of 5 institutions were reviewed. Inclusion criteria were paraplegia with absence of pain perception, surgical treatment of TL‐IVDH, and 1‐year postoperative outcome (ambulatory: yes or no). Canine data, outcome, and surgery and total anesthesia duration were retrieved. Results In this study, 183/297 (61.6%) dogs were ambulatory within 1 year, 114 (38.4%) dogs failed to recover, including 74 dogs (24.9%) euthanized because of progressive myelomalacia. Median anesthesia duration in dogs that regained ambulation within 1 year of surgery (4.0 hours, interquartile range [IQR] 3.2‐5.1) was significantly shorter than those that did not (4.5 hours, IQR 3.7‐5.6, P = .01). Multivariable logistic regression demonstrated a significant negative association between both duration of surgery and total anesthesia time and ambulation at 1 year when controlling for body weight and number of disk spaces operated on. Conclusions and Clinical Importance Findings support a negative association between increased duration of anesthesia and outcome in this group of dogs. However, the retrospective nature of the data does not imply a causal relationship.

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