AI Article Synopsis

  • Radiation causes increased capillary dilation and skin temperature in humans, and thermography can detect such changes after radiation therapy (RT).
  • In this study, a dog treated with RT for intranasal tumors showed a significant temperature rise in the nasal area after irradiation, while pain scores remained low and behavioral changes were minimal.
  • These findings highlight the importance of using objective methods like thermography for assessing pain in dogs post-RT, as traditional subjective evaluations may not fully capture their discomfort.

Article Abstract

In humans, radiation induces dilation of capillaries and inflammatory reactions to raise skin temperature. Thermography is used to detect abnormalities after radiation therapy (RT). However, in veterinary nursing, objective evaluation of the condition of dogs after RT using thermography has not been reported. We investigated the nasal irradiation temperature, behavioral changes, and post-irradiation pain scores in a dog receiving RT for intranasal tumors. The temperature of the nasal planum gradually increased after irradiation, reaching a significantly higher value at 120-240 min. The highest temperature was 42.3 °C and the average temperature increased by 4.4 °C. Behavioral analysis pre- and post-RT did not vary significantly. Post-RT pain levels evaluated by the pain scale ranged from 0 to 1 throughout. No veterinary treatment was provided. In humans, increased skin temperature after radiation causes psychological stress, i.e., pain and discomfort, but no such behavioral changes were observed in this case. Given individual differences in stress-related behaviors, such as pain and discomfort, assessing a dog's painfulness using only subjective methods, such as appearance and behavioral evaluation, is limited. We used thermography to assess changes in conditions not detectable by routine monitoring alone. This method is non-invasive, objective, and indispensable for providing appropriate care.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8467807PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11092496DOI Listing

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