Monitoring equine visceral pain with a composite pain scale score and correlation with survival after emergency gastrointestinal surgery

Recognition and management of equine pain have been studied extensively in recent decades and this has led to significant advances. However, there is still room for improvement in the ability to identify and treat pain in horses that have undergone emergency gastrointestinal surgery. This study asse...

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Veröffentlicht in:The veterinary journal (1997) 2014-04, Vol.200 (1), p.109-115
Hauptverfasser: van Loon, Johannes P.A.M., Jonckheer-Sheehy, Valerie S.M., Back, Willem, René van Weeren, P., Hellebrekers, Ludo J.
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container_end_page 115
container_issue 1
container_start_page 109
container_title The veterinary journal (1997)
container_volume 200
creator van Loon, Johannes P.A.M.
Jonckheer-Sheehy, Valerie S.M.
Back, Willem
René van Weeren, P.
Hellebrekers, Ludo J.
description Recognition and management of equine pain have been studied extensively in recent decades and this has led to significant advances. However, there is still room for improvement in the ability to identify and treat pain in horses that have undergone emergency gastrointestinal surgery. This study assessed the validity and clinical application of the composite pain scale (CPS) in horses after emergency gastrointestinal surgery. Composite pain scores were determined every 4h over 3days following emergency gastrointestinal surgery in 48 horses. Inter-observer reliability was determined and another composite visceral pain score (numerical rating scale, NRS) was determined simultaneously with CPS scores. CPS scores had higher inter-observer reliability (r=0.87, K=0.84, P
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.tvjl.2014.01.003
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However, there is still room for improvement in the ability to identify and treat pain in horses that have undergone emergency gastrointestinal surgery. This study assessed the validity and clinical application of the composite pain scale (CPS) in horses after emergency gastrointestinal surgery. Composite pain scores were determined every 4h over 3days following emergency gastrointestinal surgery in 48 horses. Inter-observer reliability was determined and another composite visceral pain score (numerical rating scale, NRS) was determined simultaneously with CPS scores. CPS scores had higher inter-observer reliability (r=0.87, K=0.84, P&lt;0.001), compared to NRS scores (r=0.68, K=0.72, P&lt;0.001). Horses that survived without complications had significantly lower CPS and NRS scores compared to horses that were euthanased or had to undergo re-laparotomy (P&lt;0.001). Breed and the location in the intestinal tract (small or large intestine) did not influence pain scores. In conclusion, the use of the CPS improved objectivity of pain scoring in horses following emergency gastrointestinal surgery. High inter-observer reliability allows for comparisons between different observers. 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subjects Colic
Composite
Emergency Treatment - veterinary
Equine
Gastrointestinal Tract - surgery
Observer Variation
Pain
Pain Management - veterinary
Pain Measurement - veterinary
Reproducibility of Results
Scale
Sensitivity and Specificity
Visceral Pain - etiology
Visceral Pain - physiopathology
Visceral Pain - veterinary
title Monitoring equine visceral pain with a composite pain scale score and correlation with survival after emergency gastrointestinal surgery
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