Thursday, November 22, 2012
End of equine rotation...and now for anesthesia!
Last week I finished my very last week on equine rotation. It was a good end to the 4 week module and we had the final MCQ examination last Friday, which was not too difficult fortunately! After a long 4 weeks on equine, I decided to head down to the city centre last weekend since I had not been down that way in quite some time. It was nice to get out and see something other than my room and the vet school! The rest of the weekend I studied for the NAVLE. I began the anesthesia rotation this week and so far it has been so much fun! Prior to this rotation, I had never seen a surgical procedure done under a general anesthetic. On Monday, we were fortunate enough to have 2 procedures to do. The first case was a horse that fractured its mandible and needed fixation via wires and screws. Unfortunately, the endotracheal tube could not be placed due to the requirement for access to the oral cavity for the procedure. So, they had to place a nasotracheal tube instead and the resident that placed it ended up hitting some of the ethmoid turbinates and caused a massage nasal hemorrhage! Once we had the ET tube in place, we attached the horse to the crane and moved it to the surgery table. About 5 minutes later, the head anesthetist noticed that the ET tube cuff was deflating and we had to place a new nasotracheal tube in. This took about 10 minutes before the anesthetist was able to get it in place, so it was quite stressful and we had to top up the injectable anesthetic so that the horse would not begin to recover. Once the tube was placed, the surgical repair of the mandible was smooth and the horse had a smooth recovery.
The second horse had a surgical procedure done in the larynx so we were unable to use an ET tube at all. We had to resort to Total Intravenous Anesthesia (TIVA), which was a mix of Romifidine, Diazepam and Ketamine. TIVA is only meant to be used for about 45 min and after that, there is a ceiling effect which causes the TIVA to become ineffective. The recovery time for TIVA is quite prolonged as well as the tissues become saturated with the drugs. The total time under TIVA in this particular horse ended up being 55min and the recovery time was about 3 hours. We sat in the break room with the TV monitor watching the horse for 2 hours while it was in lateral recumbency and non mobile. The camera has a remote control, so when the horse moves, you can follow it easily. Today, we had a septic tarsal joint case that was coming in for GA to have arthroscopy and joint lavage. All in all, this week has been an extremely good week and I have learned loads on anesthesia so far. I've learned quite a bit about breathing systems and calculating O2 flow rates and interpreting CO2, etc. Has been a very good learning experience. We have some dental cases coming in tomorrow, but they are just coming in for routine rasping so that the students on Soft Tissue rotation can rasp the teeth for practice. We did this 2 weeks ago and now it is our rotation to do the anesthesia for the cases. Should be a good day tomorrow. Anyway, I should head back to study land. Happy Thanksgiving to all and I will see most of you very soon!
Wednesday, November 7, 2012
Equine Rotation
So I am currently on my equine rotation and just finished my ICU rotation at the equine cottage and have another ICU rotation to go, which I start next Monday. The weekend ICU shift was not bad, there were 21 horses to be treated all through the night. There were loads of grass sickness cases and several colic cases that were on 2 hourly colic checks. There are two at the hospital at the moment which resent anything you do to them. Something as simple as listening to right ventral gut sounds will cause them to hop and kick! Very frustrating and a bit scary as well, especially since I am not used to working with horses! We had a horse yesterday that has been at the hospital for several weeks now. It ran into an electrical fence and managed to catch its lower lip in the fence. The lower lip became necrotic and we removed it yesterday. Whilst we were cleaning the lower lip, the horse decided to rear and leap towards everyone in the room. Was a bit stressful but the horse managed to calm down a bit afterwards.
Today we did a sinoscopy today in a case that I have been leading all week. It was presented for bilateral mucopurulent nasal discharge and had previous history of choke episodes that had since been resolved. On sinoscopy yesterday, there was quite a bit of purulent material in all of the sinuses. We placed a lavage tube and sutured it in place. Today we did the same to the opposite side and the horse loves to sneeze during sinus lavage. I was standing in front of the head today scoping the sinuses and he blew the saline we were lavaging with all over the front of me, with the majority of it going in my face...at least he was nice and did it after we removed most of the purulent material and blood clots!
I begin orthopedics next week, so that should be quite fun. I am flying back on December 2nd and will be in AZ until January 18th. Will be taking the NAVLE on December 6th! Looking forward to that 7.5 hour exam! Will be very happy to be done with it at 3.30pm that day! Well, I will try and update when I can but no promises. I have been extremely busy since the last posting. Hoping everyone is well and I will talk to you all soon!
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