Obesity prolongs induction times in reptiles
2022
Kristensen, Line | Malte, Christian Lind | Malte, Hans | Wang, Tobias | Williams, Catherine J.A.
Obesity is common in captive reptiles, and reptiles are increasingly popular as companion animals and in physiological research. Obesity may present a challenge during surgical procedures using inhalation anaesthesia, as the long induction time due to the low reptilian metabolism may increase anaesthetic accumulation in the adipose tissues. This study investigated the impact of obesity on induction and recovery times from inhaled anaesthesia. The temporal change in the partial pressure of isoflurane in different tissues was predicted using a multi-compartment model. Furthermore, as right-to-left shunting can delay anaesthetic uptake and washout, we included an assessment of the combination of cardiac shunting and obesity. The model predictions indicate a clear increase in time to reach 90% equilibration of administered anaesthetic in the brain (T₉₀) of obese non-shunting (lean 47 min, obese >100 min) and shunting (lean 81 min, obese >100 min) reptiles. The combination of obesity and shunting doubled the time to acquisition of mean anaesthetic concentration (a measure used to plan anaesthesia) from 8 min to 19 min. Adipose blood flow highly affected whether the body type had an impact on induction time, with low adipose blood flow abolishing the effect of body type. As T₉₀ was never reached within 100 min with both the obese reptiles, it was not possible to conclude on the effect of obesity on recovery times within this study. Care should therefore be taken when anaesthetising obese reptiles for surgical purposes, to ensure adequate anaesthetic depth is attained, and recovery monitored closely.
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