Cardiopulmonary changes associated with abdominal insufflation of carbon dioxide in mechanically ventilated, dorsally recumbent, halothane anaesthetised horses
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Equine Veterinary Journal
- Vol. 30 (2) , 144-151
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2042-3306.1998.tb04474.x
Abstract
The use of laparoscopy for the diagnosis or therapeutic management of abdominal disease in the horse has distinct advantages when it allows the horse to remain standing. However, distending the abdomen by insufflation of a biologically active gas in an anaesthetised horse may add to the physiological challenge of general anaesthesia and recumbency. The cardiopulmonary responses to abdominal insufflation with carbon dioxide (CO2) to 15 mmHg pressure were evaluated in 6 horses in dorsal recumbency anaesthetised with halothane in oxygen and subjected to laparoscopic colopexy. Vaporiser settings targeted a fractional expired halothane of 1.5 MAC and a clinically acceptable depth of anaesthesia. Pressure and rate controlled positive pressure ventilation was adjusted to an ETCO2 of 35 mmHg before abdominal insufflation and was not changed thereafter. Cardiopulmonary data were collected before, at 30 and 60 min during and 30 min after CO2 insufflation. ANOVA for repeated measures followed by Tukey's protected t test were used to determine differences. Partial pressure of oxygen and pH of arterial blood, tidal volume and systemic vascular resistance decreased during abdominal insufflation and laparoscopic surgery whereas mean arterial blood pressure, right atrial pressure, cardiac index, stroke index, partial pressure of CO2 in arterial blood and end tidal respiratory gases, and calculated physiological shunt increased significantly. Only systemic vascular resistance returned to the pre‐insufflation level after de‐sufflation. The hypercapnia, acidosis and apparent increase in cardiac work that accompany CO2 pneumoperitoneum for laparoscopic surgery could place the anaesthetised horse at additional risk of perioperative complications.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pathophysiologic features of a pneumoperitoneum at laparoscopy: A swine modelAmerican Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1996
- Blood Gas Values During Intermittent Positive Pressure Ventilation and Spontaneous Ventilation in 160 Anesthetized Horses Positioned in Lateral or Dorsal RecumbencyVeterinary Surgery, 1995
- An algorithm to describe the oxygen equilibrium curve for the Thoroughbred racehorseEquine Veterinary Journal, 1994
- Hemodynamic and ventilatory effects of abdominal CO2 insufflation at various pressures in the young swineJournal of Pediatric Surgery, 1994
- Carbon Dioxide Absorption Is Not Linearly Related to Intraperitoneal Carbon Dioxide Insufflation Pressure in PigsAnesthesiology, 1994
- Augmented Arterial to End-Tidal PCO2 Difference during Laparoscopic CO2 Insufflation in Man.The Japanese Journal of Physiology, 1993
- A Comparison of Xylazine–Diazepam–Ketamine and Xylazine–Guaifenesin–Ketamine in Equine AnesthesiaVeterinary Surgery, 1990
- Atelectasis causes gas exchange impairment in the anaesthetised horseEquine Veterinary Journal, 1990
- Ventilation‐perfusion relationships in the anaesthetised horseEquine Veterinary Journal, 1989