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Comparison of Three Anaesthetic Options to Reduce Acute Pain Response in Kid Goats.

E L CuttanceW A MasonJ McDermottRichard A LavenB P RuddyA J TabernerJ W McKeageSally-Anne Turner
Published in: Journal of applied animal welfare science : JAAWS (2022)
Three options for anesthetizing the skin around the horn bud of dairy goat kids were explored. Forty-five <10-day-old Saanen goat kids from were randomly split into five treatment groups (topical anesthetic cream (TA), vapocoolant spray (VS), local anesthetic applied by jet injector (JI), control - no treatment but painful stimulus applied (C), sham - no treatment and touching sites with a finger. The painful stimulus was multiple needle pricks on the skin around the horn bud. The outcome variables measured were heart rate movement, and vocalization during treatment application and administration of a painful stimulus around the horn bud. Heart rates were greater during application of a VS compared to TA.Neither the TA nor the VS appeared to have any effect on the response to the painful stimulus. Kids in the JI group had a 96% reduced odds of expressing a marked pain response in comparison to TA group and an 83% reduction in the odds of a high movement grade during a painful procedure in comparison to the combined results of the other three treatment groups.
Keyphrases
  • heart rate
  • neuropathic pain
  • chronic pain
  • blood pressure
  • minimally invasive
  • liver failure
  • high frequency
  • wound healing
  • respiratory failure
  • extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
  • replacement therapy
  • ultrasound guided