Evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified Swiss farmers

Abstract Background Certified Swiss farmers are allowed to disbud their goat kids using a standard intramuscularly administered anaesthetic mixture. This mixture, containing xylazine and ketamine, is officially distributed with the goal to provide a painless disbudding. This study aimed to evaluate...

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Main Authors: N. Wagmann, C. Spadavecchia, U. Morath-Huss, G. Schüpbach-Regula, P. Zanolari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-07-01
Series:BMC Veterinary Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-018-1544-7
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spelling doaj-5ae9cc7a4327453b86ae2655fc7752882020-11-25T00:17:50ZengBMCBMC Veterinary Research1746-61482018-07-011411810.1186/s12917-018-1544-7Evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified Swiss farmersN. Wagmann0C. Spadavecchia1U. Morath-Huss2G. Schüpbach-Regula3P. Zanolari4Clinic for Ruminants, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of BernDepartment of Veterinary Clinical Science, Anaesthesiology and Pain Therapy Division, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of BernDepartment of Veterinary Clinical Science, Anaesthesiology and Pain Therapy Division, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of BernVeterinary Public Health Institute, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of BernClinic for Ruminants, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of BernAbstract Background Certified Swiss farmers are allowed to disbud their goat kids using a standard intramuscularly administered anaesthetic mixture. This mixture, containing xylazine and ketamine, is officially distributed with the goal to provide a painless disbudding. This study aimed to evaluate the quality of analgesia and anaesthesia achieved during disbudding, when performed by Swiss farmers. To assess this, 174 goat kids at 31 different farms were observed and filmed during cautery disbudding. Results The standard anaesthetic mixture (0.05 mg/kg xylazine and 20 mg/kg ketamine) was used only in 71 goat kids. Fifty-eight goat kids were anaesthetised with different dosages of xylazine (median 0.18 mg/kg) and ketamine (median 10 mg/kg), 22 with xylazine only (median 0.61 mg/kg), 20 with xylazine (median 1.84 mg/kg) and perineural lidocaine (median 1.23 mg/kg), three with acepromazine (dosage unknown) and ketamine (10 mg/kg). Based on vocalisation, limb movement and head lifting during disbudding, a general reaction score was attributed to 168 goat kids (six were excluded due to firm restraint): 56.5% were scored zero (no limb movement, no vocalisation), 7.7% one, 17.3% two and 18.5% three (strong movements, vocalisation). Significant risk factors for higher reaction scores were the type of anaesthetic protocol and manipulation by the farmer during induction. Significant risk factors for longer recoveries were use of xylazine alone or xylazine in combination with perineural lidocaine, breed, younger age and recovery underneath heat lamp. Conclusions The present study indicates that anaesthesia and analgesia of goat kids disbudded by Swiss farmers is inadequate, as 35.8% of the animals showed moderate to strong behavioural reactions during the procedure. Unexpectedly, only 40.8% of the goat kids were anaesthetised with the standard anaesthetic mixture and several other protocols were used. A refinement of the recommended protocol is urgently needed to guarantee animal welfare.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-018-1544-7Cautery disbuddingGoat kidAnalgesiaAnaesthesiaSwitzerland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N. Wagmann
C. Spadavecchia
U. Morath-Huss
G. Schüpbach-Regula
P. Zanolari
spellingShingle N. Wagmann
C. Spadavecchia
U. Morath-Huss
G. Schüpbach-Regula
P. Zanolari
Evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified Swiss farmers
BMC Veterinary Research
Cautery disbudding
Goat kid
Analgesia
Anaesthesia
Switzerland
author_facet N. Wagmann
C. Spadavecchia
U. Morath-Huss
G. Schüpbach-Regula
P. Zanolari
author_sort N. Wagmann
title Evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified Swiss farmers
title_short Evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified Swiss farmers
title_full Evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified Swiss farmers
title_fullStr Evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified Swiss farmers
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified Swiss farmers
title_sort evaluation of anaesthesia and analgesia quality during disbudding of goat kids by certified swiss farmers
publisher BMC
series BMC Veterinary Research
issn 1746-6148
publishDate 2018-07-01
description Abstract Background Certified Swiss farmers are allowed to disbud their goat kids using a standard intramuscularly administered anaesthetic mixture. This mixture, containing xylazine and ketamine, is officially distributed with the goal to provide a painless disbudding. This study aimed to evaluate the quality of analgesia and anaesthesia achieved during disbudding, when performed by Swiss farmers. To assess this, 174 goat kids at 31 different farms were observed and filmed during cautery disbudding. Results The standard anaesthetic mixture (0.05 mg/kg xylazine and 20 mg/kg ketamine) was used only in 71 goat kids. Fifty-eight goat kids were anaesthetised with different dosages of xylazine (median 0.18 mg/kg) and ketamine (median 10 mg/kg), 22 with xylazine only (median 0.61 mg/kg), 20 with xylazine (median 1.84 mg/kg) and perineural lidocaine (median 1.23 mg/kg), three with acepromazine (dosage unknown) and ketamine (10 mg/kg). Based on vocalisation, limb movement and head lifting during disbudding, a general reaction score was attributed to 168 goat kids (six were excluded due to firm restraint): 56.5% were scored zero (no limb movement, no vocalisation), 7.7% one, 17.3% two and 18.5% three (strong movements, vocalisation). Significant risk factors for higher reaction scores were the type of anaesthetic protocol and manipulation by the farmer during induction. Significant risk factors for longer recoveries were use of xylazine alone or xylazine in combination with perineural lidocaine, breed, younger age and recovery underneath heat lamp. Conclusions The present study indicates that anaesthesia and analgesia of goat kids disbudded by Swiss farmers is inadequate, as 35.8% of the animals showed moderate to strong behavioural reactions during the procedure. Unexpectedly, only 40.8% of the goat kids were anaesthetised with the standard anaesthetic mixture and several other protocols were used. A refinement of the recommended protocol is urgently needed to guarantee animal welfare.
topic Cautery disbudding
Goat kid
Analgesia
Anaesthesia
Switzerland
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12917-018-1544-7
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