1. The use of a nerve stimulation test to confirm sacrococcygeal epidural needle placement in cats.
- Author
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Otero PE, Verdier N, Zaccagnini AS, Fuensalida SE, Tarragona L, and Portela DA
- Subjects
- Anesthesia, Epidural methods, Animals, Cat Diseases surgery, Cats, Female, Injections, Epidural methods, Lumbar Vertebrae anatomy & histology, Male, Prospective Studies, Anesthesia, Epidural veterinary, Electric Stimulation methods, Injections, Epidural veterinary, Needles, Sacrococcygeal Region anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Objective: To determine if a nerve stimulation test (NST) could act as a monitoring technique to confirm sacrococcygeal epidural needle placement in cats., Study Design: Prospective experimental trial in a clinical setting., Animals: Twenty-four adult cats, scheduled for a therapeutic procedure where epidural anesthesia was indicated., Methods: Under general anesthesia, an insulated needle was inserted through the S3 -Cd1 intervertebral space guided by the application of a fixed electrical current (0.7 mA) until a motor response was obtained. The NST was considered positive when the epidural nerve stimulation produced a motor response of the muscles of the tail, whereas it was considered negative when no motor response was evoked. In the NST positive cases, 0.3 mL kg(-1) of 0.5% bupivacaine was administrated before needle withdrawal. Ten minutes after injection, epidural blockade was confirmed by the loss of perineal (anal), and pelvic limbs reflexes (patellar and withdrawal)., Results: The use of a fixed electrical stimulation current of 0.7 mA resulted in correct prediction of sacrococcygeal epidural injection, corroborated by post bupivacaine loss of perineal and pelvic limb reflexes, in 95.8% of the cases., Conclusion and Clinical Relevance: This study demonstrates the feasibility of using, in a clinical setting, an electrical stimulation test as an objective and in real-time method to confirm sacrococcygeal epidural needle placement in cats., (© 2014 Association of Veterinary Anaesthetists and the American College of Veterinary Anesthesia and Analgesia.)
- Published
- 2015
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