Retrospective evaluation of the effect of inhalant anesthesia on complications and recurrence rates in feline urethral obstruction

Author:

Perrucci Jessica1,Walton Rebecca1ORCID,Zorn Chelsea1,Yuan Lingnan1,Mochel Jonathan P1,Blong April1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA

Abstract

Objectives The aim of this study was to evaluate the use of inhalant anesthesia vs sedation for urinary catheter placement in male cats with urethral obstruction. The primary outcome measures were the incidence of complications related to catheterization, the incidence of recurrent urethral obstruction (rUO; both during hospitalization and within 1 year) and survival. The secondary aim of this study was to evaluate the association between baseline serum biochemical concentrations and antispasmodic medications with complications and short-term rUO. Methods We carried out a retrospective review of records from a university teaching hospital from 2009 to 2020. Cats were included if diagnosed with a urinary obstruction, based on the presence of a large, painful and non-expressible bladder, a urinary catheter was placed and hospitalization occurred for a minimum of 24 h. Collected baseline data included age, breed, weight, serum biochemical concentrations and if cats underwent sedation or inhalant anesthesia for urethral catheterization. For the comparison of inhalant anesthesia or sedation, univariate logistic regression was used. Results There was no statistically significant difference in complications or the recurrence of obstruction in cats with urethral obstruction that underwent inhalant anesthesia compared with sedation. All serum biochemical concentrations were significantly associated with survival. Decreased serum ionized calcium was found to be statistically significantly associated with higher complication rates ( P = 0.0086), as well as short-term recurrence of obstruction ( P = 0.004). Increased serum potassium concentrations were found to be statistically significantly associated with the risk of short-term recurrent urethral obstruction ( P = 0.0345). No significant difference was found between the use of antispasmodic medications with short-term recurrence. Conclusions and relevance No significant difference was found between complications or recurrence rates when comparing the use of inhalant anesthesia to sedation protocols. Baseline serum biochemical data were significantly associated with complications, survival and short-term recurrence rates.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Small Animals

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