|
|
|
Pre-Surgical Information
Spaying or neutering your pet is a big step! There is a lot to consider
when we are planning your pet’s surgery. Here is some information to help
you make wise decisions.
Click here . . .
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Special LibraryOur Special Library
is a collection of informative articles on a variety of health topics.
Click here . . .
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Discharge InstructionsClick here for
information on how to care for your pet at home.
Click here . . .
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Consumer Guide
to Elective
Surgery: Surgical Options
On another page we have discussed
Best Practices, but sometimes Best Practices
aren't an option. Our goal is to get the best care
possible for our patients with the budget we have.
Sometimes, economics forces us to make some choices and
compromises in health care. What follows is intended to
help you make some good decisions about the level of care you
choose for your pet. It is not an exercise in
high-pressure sales, nor is it a big guilt-trip. But it is an
honest discussion. Let's face it, anesthesia and surgery
are complicated things. Just as there are consequences to
doing things, there are consequences to not doing things.
The following will help explain some of these consequences, what
the risks are, how they can be managed, and hopefully help you
to make some good decisions about how to get the most care for
the budget you have. Let's start with the basics.
The Basic Surgical Package
What you get for the Basic Surgical Package is just
that: the basics. It is the mimimum level of care
that we feel we can ethically offer. The patients get some
pre-medication, but not the good stuff, and this means that we
have lost a major opportunity to do some substantial pain
control. We induce anesthesia and maintain it with gas,
and we monitor carefully as usual, but there is no IV line.
Because of this, blood pressure is more likely to drop, and if
it does drop we are limited in our ability to respond to it.
A nd
then there are the life-and-death safety issues with not having
IV access in case of an emergency. We do the surgery the
good old fashioned way, with a steel scalpel blade, just as
surgery has been done all along. Our patients wake up, and
then they are started on the pain pills that they go home on.
Simple and basic, 1970's style veterinary medicine.
But let's face it, if the 1970's were so great, we'd all still
be wearing leisure suits and playing Pong. We have come a
long ways since then, and we have a lot more to offer our
patients now. What kinds of things? There are four
upgrades, Best Practices, if you will, that can be added to the
Basic Surgical Package to greatly increase patient comfort and
safety.
Pre-emptive Pain Medication
All surgery patients experience pain, 100% of them. Although
some people don't believe pets feel pain, or that they don't
feel it for very long, at Sunnyside Veterinary Clinic we believe
that surgery hurts, that pain needs to be aggressively
controlled, and the pain needs to be thoroughly treated for
several days post-op. We recommend that your first upgrade be
Pre-emptive Pain Management. The concept of Pre-emptive Pain
Management is powerful. Modern science has shown us that
if potent opioid pain medication is given before the painful
stimulus ever happens, the patient's whole pain response is
dampend down. The nervous system does not register pain as
strongly as it would have.

The medications we give at the dosages we use make the direct
effects of the Pre-emptive Pain medications last from 8 to 12
hours, which makes for a much more pleasant post-operative
experience. But is doesn't stop there. Because of the
dampening effect, even after the medications have worn off the
effect remains throughout the recovery period.
Click here for an in-depth discussion of pain management.
Pre-emptive Pain Management does not replace take-home pain
medications. Rather, it supplements them. They
operate in different ways to control pain, and their effects add
up. In fact, as part of our Pre-emptive Pain Management,
we often use yet another class of medications to provide pain
relief. Local anesthetics, just like the novocaine your
dentist uses, can be infused in the areas to be operated on.
This further dampens the pain before it even starts, and even
after the locals wear off their dampening effect linger
throughout the recovery period. Using several different
kinds of medications whose effects add up is called multi-modal
pain management, and can greatly increase the comfort of our
surgical patients.
These medications are much better than the pills often used for
post-op pain relief. They are comparable to morphine or demerol,
which are the highly potent pain drugs you would get if you had
major surgery. This costs only about $18, and we
recommend it because of the increased pain control and stress
relief it provides. Click here to go to a page on the science behind pre-emptive
pain management. Or,
click here for a somewhat more "user-friendly" video
presentation on pain management by the pain management team at
the Colorado State University College of Veterinary Medicine
entitled
Is Your Pet in Pain?".
IV Fluid Support
In the old days before veterinarians measured blood pressure
during surgery, they didn't know that many of their patients
were getting into blood pressure problems during procedures.
The research literature shows that about 30% to 40% of our
surgical patients experience low blood pressure at some point
during their anesthesia. (Practices that do not monitor
blood pressure do not even know that their patients are
experiencing low blood p ressure.)
Now, this is not because we are doing something wrong. It
is just part of the anesthesia game. It happens to humans
under anesthesia too, even in the best operating rooms around.
This is why whenever a human is anesthetized, there is always am
IV line in and there are always fluids running.
The consequences of low blood pressure, or hypotension, can be
severe. Patients that develop hypotension are at a greatly
increased risk of anesthetic-related problems. It has been
recently reported at the 2005 annual meeting of the American
Society of Anesthesiologists (a human anesthesiology group) that
"Low intraoperative blood pressure is associated with a
significantly greater number of negative outcomes after surgery,
according to preliminary results of an ongoing investigation.
Researchers at the University of Michigan Medical School, Ann
Arbor, said the study showed that patients whose systolic blood
pressure drops below 90 mm Hg are more likely to die than are
their counterparts whose systolic blood pressure remains above
this level." They found that patients with
hypotension had from two to six times the risk of death.
You can read the full text
here. Our animal patients face the same risks, with
some added species-specific problems. For instance, in
cats, hypotension has been associated with kidney damage that
may not show up until later in life. Low blood pressure
during surgery also predisposes the feline patient to have
adverse reactions to pain medications given post-op. At
the very least, hypotension causes the patient to feel bad for
the next few days post-op, presumably due to decreased blood
flow to the brain. It's kind of like being hung over
without the benefit of having been drunk the night before.
And then there is the huge safety issue.
In the event that something goes wrong during
anesthesia, how in the world are you going to give
emergency drugs to a crashing patient with low blood
pressure if there is no IV line in place? The
answer is "not very quickly if at all." Without an
IV line, you may not be able to get venous access at the
time you need it the most.
To help prevent dangerous episodes of low blood pressure, and to
provide an important safety net, we recommend that your second
upgrade be IV fluid support. Giving IV fluids helps maintain
healthy blood pressure, replaces fluids lost during surgery,
helps prevent kidney damage, makes the post-op pain medication
safer, and provides emergency venous access for resuscitation in
case of problems during anesthesia. This upgrade costs
about $35.00, and we recommend it because of the increased
safety and comfort it provides.
Laser Surgery
For as long as surgery has been done, the instrument of choice
has been the steel scalpel blade. The blade has served us
well, but modern technology has brought us another option.
The CO2 laser gives us another way to cut tissue that is better
than the steel blade in many respects.
Steel just cuts. The laser not only cuts, but it
simultaneously cauterizes the blood vessels, resulting in much
less bleeding. With the laser, because nothing
ever
really touches the tissue, there is none of the crushing and
tearing that happens on a microscopic level even with the
sharpest steel, resulting in less swelling. Also, the laser
seals lymphatics as it cuts, which also reduces the amount of
post-operative swelling. Because the laser vaporizes
bacteria, laser incisions are less likely to become infected.
And probably most importantly, lasers not only cauterize blood
vessels, they seal the nerves as they are cut as well, resulting
in less pain. To the left is an image of an actual surgical
incision made with the laser. Notice that it is not
bleeding, not even a little.
Laser technology allows us to do some surgical procedures in a
new way. In particular, the laser declaw surgery and the
laser dog neuter surgery are done in quite different ways than
the traditional scalpel methods. In both cases the new
techniques result in fewer complications and more rapid return
to function.
Laser surgery results in less pain, less swelling, less
scarring, less bleeding, and a quicker return to function.
Not bad for a new-comer. Now, laser surgery doesn't
eliminate the need for excellent pain medication. Laser
incisions still hurt, and there is still great benefit to be had
from pre-emptive main management. Laser surgery in another
important modality in our multi-modal approach to pain control.
Laser surgery adds about $28 to the cost, and we recommend it
because of the increased comfort it offers.
Pre-Anesthetic Blood Testing
This is often done before humans are given anesthesia. The
reason is that not eve rybody
is as healthy as they look. A blood sample is drawn, and it is
analyzed to determine whether or not there are any problems with
the liver, the kidneys, blood sugar, dehydration, etc.
We find that not all of our veterinary patients are as healthy
as they look either. Somewhere on the order of 1% of the
healthy-looking patients end up having some significant problems
when they are tested. While this is not a huge percentage,
we do more than 100 procedures a year, so we do find significant
problems from time to time. I can honestly tell you that
pre-anesthetic blood testing has saved more than one life in
this practice. Testing costs about $45 and is well
worth the added safety it affords.
How to Decide
When we meet for your pet's Pre-surgical Exam, we can discuss
any concerns or questions you may have. You will be asked to
decide whether to accept or decline our recommendations for
pre-emptive pain medication, IV fluid support, and
pre-anesthetic blood testing. We recommend all the safety and
comfort options, but realize that this may not be an economic
option all the time. In real life, we often have real life
budgets, and we understand that. The Pre-Surgical Exam is not
meant to be an exercise in high-pressure sales or a big
guilt-trip. Our goal is to get the highest level of care
for our patient with the budget we have. To help you make
the best choices for your pet, we recommend that you choose the
options in this order:
First: Pre-emptive pain medication.
100% of surgical patients experience pain, and for $18.00 you
get a lot of benefit per dollar.
Second: IV Fluid support. 40% or so of anesthetized
patients experience blood pressure problems, and the effects can
be quite severe. Also, there is the safety net an IV line
provides in case there is an anesthetic emergency.
Third and Fourth: laser surgery and pre-anesthetic testing, in
no particular order. It's hard to tell which is more
important out of these two. Laser surgery increases
patient comfort for every patient, while pre-anesthetic testing
can be a real life-saver for a few patients.
I hope you've enjoyed your trip through The Consumer Guide to
Elective Surgery. I'm sure you found it to be somewhat of
an information overload. During your pre-surgery
consultation, there will be plenty of time to discuss any
questions you may have.
Surgical FAQ's is another helpful page about spay and neuter
surgeries.
Declawing Cats is a helpful page on declawing.
Click Here to return to
Consumer Guide: Best Practices.
Click here to Return to
Pre-Surgical Information.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|