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Ketamine Sedation followed by Propofol Anesthesia in a Slider, Trachemys scripta, to Facilitate Removal of an Esophageal Foreign Body
Assoc Reptilian Amphibian Vet 8[1]:16-17 Spring'98 Case Report 9 Refs

Geoffrey W. Pye, BVSc, MSc; James W. Carpenter, MS, DVM, Dipl., ACZM
Exotic Animal, Wildlife and Zoo Animal Service, College of Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS 66506

- Surgical anesthesia of chelonians can be difficult to achieve using injectable anesthetic agents without prolonged recovery periods. Ketamine as the sole anesthetic agent requires doses of 55-90 mg/kg IM to achieve surgical anesthesia in chelonians and recovery may take one to several days. Some veterinarians consider propofol to be the injectable agent of choice for reptile anesthesia and recommend a dose of 10-15 mg/kg IV. Surgical anesthesia lasts 15-25 minutes and recovery takes 25-40 minutes. Because propofol must be given intravenously, administration in chelonians can prove difficult when the tail vein cannot be found and the head cannot be extracted for jugular venipuncture without sedation. Metomidate has been used at a dose of 10-20 mg/kg IM in snakes to facilitate intravenous infusion of propofol. Following metomidate premedication, the propofol dose was reduced to 5 mg/kg. Ketamine at a dose of 22-44 mg/kg produces sedation in chelonians and this allows extension of the neck so that the jugular vein can be accessed. This report describes three episodes of anesthesia in an individual slider, Trachemys scripta, in which premedication with ketamine (25-30 mg/kg IM) was used to facilitate exposure of the jugular vein and propofol (7 mg/kg) was given IV to achieve short term surgical anesthesia for esophageal examination and fishhook removal.


Address (URL): http://www.arav.org/journals/JA012022.htm


Assoc Reptilian Amphibian Vet 1998 Vol. 8 No. 1

Use of Nystatin to Reduce Suspected Overgrowth of Enteric Fungal Organisms in a Diamond Python, Morelia spilota spilota and Two Honduran Milksnakes, Lampropeltis trianqulum hondurensis
Identification of a Gastrointestinal Nematode in the Boelen's Python, Morelia boeleni
Parasitic Conjunctivitis and Lacrimal Adenitis in Two Tiger Salamanders, Ambystoma tigrinum mavortium
Hepatic Abscess due to Corynebacterium sp. in Desert Tortoise, Gopherus agassizii
Ketamine Sedation followed by Propofol Anesthesia in a Slider, Trachemys scripta, to Facilitate Removal of an Esophageal Foreign Body
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