Efficacy of Intra-Operative Topical Wound Anaesthesia to Mitigate Piglet Castration Pain-A Large, Multi-Centred Field Trial.
Meredith SheilGiulia Maria De BenedictisAnnalisa ScolloSuzanne MetcalfeGiles InnocentAdam PolkinghorneFlaviana GottardoPublished in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2021)
Piglet castration results in acute pain and stress to the animal. There is a critical need for effective on-farm methods of pain mitigation. Local anaesthesia using Tri-Solfen® (Animal Ethics Pty Ltd., Melbourne, Australia), a topical local anaesthetic and antiseptic formulation instilled to the wound during surgery, is a newly evolving on-farm method to mitigate castration pain. To investigate the efficacy of Tri-Solfen®, instilled to the wound during the procedure, to alleviate subsequent castration-related pain in neonatal piglets, we performed a large, negatively controlled, randomised field trial in two commercial pig farms in Europe. Piglets (173) were enrolled and randomised to undergo castration with or without Tri-Solfen®, instilled to the wound immediately following skin incision. A 30 s wait period was then observed prior to completing castration. Efficacy was investigated by measuring pain-induced motor and vocal responses during the subsequent procedure and post-operative pain-related behaviour in treated versus untreated piglets. There was a significant reduction in nociceptive motor and vocal response during castration and in the post-operative pain-related behaviour response in Tri-Solfen®-treated compared to untreated piglets, in the first 30 min following castration. Although not addressing pain of skin incision, Tri-Solfen® is effective to mitigate subsequent acute castration-related pain in piglets under commercial production conditions.
Keyphrases
- chronic pain
- pain management
- neuropathic pain
- clinical trial
- wound healing
- public health
- spinal cord injury
- coronary artery disease
- randomized controlled trial
- drug delivery
- drug induced
- open label
- aortic dissection
- respiratory failure
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- hepatitis b virus
- surgical site infection
- single molecule
- atomic force microscopy