Induction Agents Flashcards
What are the induction agents used in veterinary medicine?
- Ketamine
- Propofol
- Alfaxalone
- Thiopentone (old barbiturate induction agent sometimes used in horses)
Define an Induction Agent
The administration of a drug, or combination of drugs, at the beginning of an anesthetic that results in unconsciousness
- Typically following a pre-medication
What are Induction agents used IV?
- Ketamine + Diazepam: bolus
- Propofol: slow adm
- Alfaxalone: slow adm
- Thiopentone: bolus (slow adm will result in excitement)
What Induction agents used IM?
- Ketamine +/- alpha2 agonist or Diazepam (Ketamine stings though!)
- Alfaxalone: good for cats!
Are there reversal agents for the 4 induction agents?
No!
Once an animal has been induced, what must be done ?
- Monitor patients vitals (RR + HR)
- Intubate +/- IPPV
- Oxygen supplementation
- Emergency drugs at the ready
What are the benefits of using Alfaxalone?
- Causes minimal CVS changes (ie SVR, HR and BP): good for cardiac disease patients
- Good muscle relaxation
What are the benefits of using Ketamine?
- Provides dissociative analgesia at NMDA receptors
What are the benefits of using Propofol?
- Rapid and Smooth recovery
- Good muscle relaxation
- Non-cumulative, suitable for TIVA
- Suitable for thin dogs and “sight” hounds
- Not arrhythmogenic
- Extra-hepatic metabolism: good for liver disease patients
What are the benefits of using Thiopentone?
- Rapid (30 sec) induction, the others can take up to a minute
- Good muscle relaxation
What are the cautions of using Alfaxalone?
- Post-induction apnea
- Respiratory depression, especially with repeated top-ups
- NO analgesia
What are the cautions of using Ketamine?
- CVS changes: increase HR + BP (can be beneficial though)
- Post-induction apnea
- Respiratory depression, especially with repeated top-ups
- Inadequate muscle relaxation when given alone, must give with alpha2 or BZD
What are the cautions of using Propofol?
- CVS changes: vasodilation + possible bradycardia and drop in BP
- Post-induction apnea: can be avoided by adm. slowly and is usually short lived (2-3 mins)
- Respiratory depression, especially with repeated top-ups
- NO analgesia
- Propofol twitches: muscle twitches are self-limiting
What are the cautions of using Thiopentone?
- CVS changes: vasodilation + tachycardia
- Post-induction apnea
- Respiratory depression, especially with repeated top-ups
- Can cause heightened sense of pain if given alone
- If accidentally given peri-vascularly, it is VERY irritant and will cause sloughing of the skin. Animals with black hair will grow white hair in that area permanently
Give an IM injectable anesthesia protocol useful for short procedures (e.g. sedation for xrays or quill removal)
IM: Medetomidine + Ketamine +/- Butorphanol