Colic - Medical Management Flashcards
What are the following parameters for medical?
- Degree of pain/response to analgesia
- Heart rate
- CRT
- MM colour
- Borborygmi
- Peritoneocentesis
- TP/colour
- PCV/TP/Lactate concs
- Recovery from nasogastric intubation
- Rectal findings
- Mid-low pain
- Responds to analgesia
- <60
- <2
- Normal
- Present
- Normal
- Normal
- <3-5L fluid
- Disease dependant – mildy abnormal
What are the following parameters for medical?
- Degree of pain/response to analgesia
- Heart rate
- CRT
- MM colour
- Borborygmi
- Peritoneocentesis
- TP/colour
- PCV/TP/Lactate concs
- Recovery from nasogastric intubation
- Rectal findings
- High pain
- No response to analgesia. Depending if pony/donkey/cobb/native breed – stoic (rely on clinical signs)
- >60
- 3-4
- Dark pink (maybe toxic rings around teeth). Congested
- Absent
- Serosanguinus
- Increased TP
- Increased (lactate >5)
- TP> 30
- >5L
- Abnormal
Name 5 exceptions for how you expect colic to act. (7)
- Grass sickness (equine dysautonomia) – high HR (high nasogastric reflux). Alwayss above 60
- Anterior enteritis – high HR and large volumes of NG reflux. Common in other parts of the world.
- Colitis – usually severely hypovolaemic (high HR). Will look like surgical colic. Dark red MM.
- Peritonitis – high HR and hypovolaemic
- Spasmodic colics - can be very painful, often intermittent. Normally respond to analgesia (not always)
- Epiploic foramen entrapments – normal rectal findings. SI gets stuck a long way forward between foramen (stomach and liver). Normal rectal findings as distended is further forward.
- Ponies and donkeys – very stoic, beware
Which horse should you refer and where should you refer?
- Surgical cases
- Severe colitis
- Grass sickness (chronic)
- Any horse the client wants you to refer
- Medical cases which need a lot of care
–In an ideal world – refer to a local clinic with appropriate specialisation.
–Depends what it is – relatively local but to the right person
How are we going to initially manage a horse with colic?
–Manage pain
•Analgesia – NSAIDs, Opioids, Hyasine (anti-spasmodic not a true analgesia but will help reduce contractions)
–Prevent deterioration
What NSAIDs can we use and what are the effects? (3)
- Phenylbutazone – NEED passport
- Flunixin meglumine – won’t affect HR, gut sounds and mm (hypovolaemia). No evidence anti toxin. May mask surgical pain.
–Can use a lower dose if unsure
•Carprofen/meloxicam - £££
Name 3 anti-spasmodics (4)
- Butylscopolamine (hyoscine butylbromide) +/- metamizole (works for about 20 minutes)
- Pethidine (only lasts about an hour). Licensed for spasmodic colic
- Buprenorphine
- (Methadone – on cascade, licensed in dogs)
What are the alpha 2 agonists?
What are the properties?
Why might you administer this?
What are the benefits?
What are the pitfalls?
•Xylazine/Detomidine/Romifidine
–None licensed in colics but are necessary
–Longest acting - romifidine
–Shortest acting – xylazine
–Give IV to act quickly. If we wanted it to last could give IM larger dose
•What properties do these drugs have?
–Analgesic & sedative
•Why might you administer these?
–Transport
•What are the benefits?
–Very painful horse hard to manage
–Analgesia
–Reduce heart rate – but wont in a hypovolaemic patient!!
–Reeduce gut motility
–Can use in CV collpase
•What are the pitfalls?
–Make them wee! Bad if dehydrated
–Not licensed in colic
What opioids can we use?
•Butorphanol a poor analgesic and quite expensive when used at ‘analgesic dose’ – 10 times the ‘sedative dose’
–expensive
Buprenorphine – good analgesia to keep in the car.
- Boluses or infusions of morphine (or methadone*) occasionally useful in a referral environment
- * now has SA license – but not as good re PK/PD as morphine for use in CRI’s
- What are the indications for administering fluids?
- What routes can you use?
- When would you not use oral fluids?
- What conditions are oral fluids particularly valuable for?
•What are the indications for administering fluids?
–Hypovolaemia, dehydrated (rare in colic), large colon/caecal impactions
•What routes can you use?
–Enteral, oral, IV, per rectum
–IV – hypovolaemia
–Oral – impaction
–Per rectum – well absorbed but on going work
•When would you not use oral fluids?
–Surgical lesion, ileus, lots of NG reflux, >5% fluid deficit
–Obstruction in the small or large intestine
–Really hypovolaemic – oral fluids, the first place the blood comes from is the GI tract so the fluids wont be absorbed
•What conditions are oral fluids particularly valuable for?
–Large colonic impactions in horses that aren’t hypovolaemic
–Pelvic flexure
•NB Horses are not labradors and do not weigh 30 Kg!
–If IV fluids are indicated it is important to try to accurately calculate how much fluid deficit is present. If the horse has to be transported then you need to give fluids. If the referral is close just get them there
–What are the maintenance requirements for an adult horse and foal? How much fluid is that for a 500Kg TB?
–How much fluid is required to replace a 10% deficit in a 500 Kg TB?
–What are the maintenance requirements for an adult horse and foal? How much fluid is that for a 500Kg TB?
- 2ml/kg/hour – adult
- 5ml/kg/hour – young. Made of more fluid so need more
- ~1L/h
–How much fluid is required to replace a 10% deficit in a 500 Kg TB?
•50L (plus maintenance)
What is the relationship between exercise and colic?
•Commonly recommended in cases with minimal pain
–e.g. mild large colonic tympany palpable on rectal examination
–Horses with left dorsal displacement (nephrosplenic entrapment) and RDD if not too painful
–Horses can be lunged assuming they have received appropriate analgesia
–Spasmodic colic, displacement (assuming no tight taenia bands)
–DO NOT RECOMMEND OWNER TO WALK UNLESS YOU’VE SEEN
- DO NOT walk horses with severe colic
- Put in deep bedded box and keep quiet
•What conditions may cause ileus in the horse and why?
–SIRS, dead gut, kink in SI, inflammation in bowl wall, peritonitis, lack of feeding, trauma in surgery (not careful or slow surgeons), stress, pain
–In horses we starve post surgery – this is something which we may need to change
–Adult horses don’t get cold in surgery like bunnies
How do we diagnose ileus?
–Absence of (or very few) gut sounds (low borborygmi), US (absence or non-progressive motility), high HR, pass NGT (fluid back implies no motility), low faecal output
How can we manage horses that have ileus secondary to peritonitis?
–Anti-endotoxin drugs (e.g. Polymixin B), BS ABs, put drain into abdomen and lavage (~10L at a time)
–Abdominal lavage