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Topical anaesthesia alleviates short‐term pain of castration and tail docking in lambs
Author(s) -
Lomax S,
Dickson H,
Sheil M,
Windsor PA
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
australian veterinary journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.382
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1751-0813
pISSN - 0005-0423
DOI - 10.1111/j.1751-0813.2009.00546.x
Subject(s) - castration , medicine , anesthesia , hyperalgesia , carprofen , placebo , bupivacaine , analgesic , surgery , nociception , receptor , alternative medicine , pathology , hormone
Objective To investigate the effect of a topical anaesthetic formulation on pain alleviation, wound healing and systemic levels of local anaesthetic actives in lambs undergoing castration and tail docking. Design Three placebo‐controlled and/or randomised experiments were conducted using three groups of Merino lambs (n = 62, 68 and 19) undergoing routine castration and tail docking. Procedure Surgical castration, with either surgical or hot‐iron tail docking, was performed with and without the application of topical anaesthetic (Tri‐Solfen®) or placebo. The effects of this procedure were compared with those of rubber ring castration and tail docking, and of the handled but unmarked controls. Wound pain was assessed using calibrated Von‐Frey monofilaments over a 4‐h period, pain‐related behaviour was assessed over 5 h, wound healing was assessed at 14 and 28 days, and the plasma levels of lignocaine and bupivacaine were determined. Results Rapid and up to 4 h primary hyperalgesia developed following surgical castration and tail docking in the untreated and placebo‐treated lambs. It was absent in the castration wounds, and significantly reduced in the tail‐docking wounds, of the treated lambs. Hot‐iron docking was associated with mild and transient secondary hyperalgesia, which was abolished by the topical anaesthesia. There was a significant reduction in pain‐related behaviours in treated lambs, which were not significantly different in their behaviour to the sham‐operation handled controls. Plasma lignocaine and bupivacaine levels were below the toxic thresholds in all tested lambs. Conclusion Topical anaesthesia alleviates wound pain and significantly reduces pain‐related behaviours in lambs undergoing surgical castration plus surgical or hot‐iron tail docking, without a negative effect on wound healing or a risk of systemic toxicity.