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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Subclinical Hypoventilation in Dogs Undergoing Ventral Slot Decompressive Surgery for Cervical Myelopathy Due to Intervertebral Disc Herniation.

TLDR
In this paper, the occurrence of post-operative hypoventilation in dogs undergoing decompressive ventral slot or hemilaminectomy for the treatment of intervertebral disc herniation (IVDH) was documented.
Abstract
The objective of this prospective cohort study was to document the occurrence of post-operative hypoventilation in dogs undergoing decompressive ventral slot or hemilaminectomy for the treatment of intervertebral disc herniation (IVDH). Twenty dogs undergoing ventral slot surgery and 20 dogs undergoing hemilaminectomy surgery for the treatment of IVDH that presented to XX between 2017 and 2020 were enrolled. Dogs were anesthetized using a standard protocol. Blood gas samples were taken at up to 11 time points beginning during anesthetic recovery and continuing for a maximum of 72 h post-operatively. Dogs with cervical lesions that were non-ambulatory before surgery had more evidence of subclinical hypoventilation in the immediate peri-extubation period than dogs with less severe injuries or those undergoing hemilaminectomy surgery. We found no difference in the ventilation status in dogs undergoing cervical or thoracolumbar decompressive surgery for IVDH from 8 to 72 h post-operatively. Other markers of acid-base status indicated that subclinical hypoventilation within the peri-extubation period was transient and self-limiting. There was a moderate positive correlation between sedation scores and estimated PaCO2. These data suggest that dogs with severe cervical spinal cord injuries may be at risk for subclinical hypoventilation in the immediate peri-extubation period. Increased sedation may be correlated with decreased ventilatory status in dogs recovering from decompressive vertebral column surgery.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Early Locomotor Training in Tetraplegic Post-Surgical Dogs with Cervical Intervertebral Disc Disease

TL;DR: Early LT may be a safe treatment to be applied in the first 3 days on these dogs and spinal hyperesthesia should be important to the rehabilitation team.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dysphonia in a dog with cervical spinal cord injury and suspected progressive myelomalacia caused by a C4‐C5 hydrated nucleus pulposus extrusion

TL;DR: A 10.5-year-old dog was presented with acute onset tetraparesis progressing to tetraplegia and the clinical sign of dysphonia was documented in the absence of signs of laryngeal dysfunction as mentioned in this paper .
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Repeated Measures Correlation

TL;DR: The R package (rmcorr) is introduced and its use for inferential statistics and visualization with two example datasets are used to illustrate research questions at different levels of analysis, intra-individual, and inter-individual.
Journal ArticleDOI

Calculating correlation coefficients with repeated observations: Part 2—correlation between subjects

TL;DR: In earlier Statistics Notes1 2 the authors commented on the analysis of paired data where there is more than one observation per subject and it can be highly misleading to analyse such data by combining repeated observations from several subjects and then calculating the correlation coefficient as if the data were a simple sample.