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Analgesia in pet rabbits: a survey study on how pain is assessed and ameliorated by veterinary surgeons. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study focused on understanding pain management in rabbits during veterinary care found an increase in the use of analgesics over the years, particularly nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and opioids.
  • A survey of veterinary professionals revealed that while most administer these pain medications, the dosages often do not align with recommendations, highlighting variability in treatment practices.
  • Despite improvements in analgesia for rabbits, proper pain assessment techniques remain limited, worsened by the absence of specific pain scales for rabbits.

Article Abstract

Background: In the last 20 years, two studies on the veterinary use of perioperative analgesia in small mammals reported a limited use of analgesics in rabbits but suggested an increasing use over the years. The aim of this study was to better understand how pain is treated and ameliorated in rabbits while under veterinary care.

Methods: An online survey of 60 questions was developed and advertised at national and international veterinary conferences, in veterinary publications and on social media.

Results: In total 94.3 per cent of the respondents routinely administered nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) to rabbits undergoing surgical procedures such as neutering, 71.4 per cent administered an opioid and 70.3 per cent routinely administered multimodal analgesia, although dosages do not always match current consensus opinion. Buprenorphine and meloxicam were the most common analgesic drugs prescribed by the respondents. The dosage of meloxicam administered both parenterally and orally varied widely.

Conclusion: Rabbit analgesia has improved over recent years similarly to the trend seen in other companion animals. However, overall it seems that pain assessment is still limited in rabbits. The lack of multimodal composite pain scales specific for rabbits makes this task even more challenging.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/vr.105071DOI Listing

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