Lizard Formulary - Anaesthesia Associated Drugs
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This article is still under construction. |
Anaesthesia associated drugs
Acetylpromazine
- Pre-anaesthetic
- 0.05-0.5 mg/kg
Alphadolone/alphaxalone
- Saffan 3 mg/ml alphadolone and 9 mg/ml alphaxalone giving a 12mg/ml solution
- Induction and maintenance of general anaesthesia
- 6-9 mg/kg IV
- 9-15 mg/kg IM
- Incremental doses according to the animal's response
Atropine
- Pre-anaesthetic
- Use with bradycardia
- 0.01-0.1 mg/kg IM,SC
Buprenorphine
- Analgesic
- 0.005-0.02 mg/kg IM q24-48h
Butorphanol
- Analgesic
- No established dose
Diazepam
- No established dose
Doxapram
- Respiratory stimulant
- 5 mg/kg IV
Halothane
- Gaseous anaesthetic
- 3-4% induction
- 1.5-3% maintenance
Isoflurane
- Inhalational anaesthetic of choice
- Less hepatotoxic than other inhalants
- Rapid induction and recovery in lizards
- Up to 6% induction
- 2-3% maintenance
Ketamine
- Muscle relaxation and analgesia may be marginal
- Prolonged recovery with higher doses
- Larger reptiles require lower dose
- Painful at injection site
- Questionable safety in debilitated animals
- Avoid use with renal impairment
- Lizards require lower dose than other reptiles
- 10-30 mg/kg IM as a sedative, facilitates intubation
- Useful in large lizards (11.6 mg/kg) in combination with midazolam (0.34-0.35 mg/kg)
Lignocaine
- Local anaesthetic
Midazolam
- May be useful in some species
- 2 mg/kg
Pentobarbitone
- Euthanasia
- 60 mg/kg IV, ICo
Propofol
- Injectable anaesthetic of choice
- Rapid induction and rapid recovery
- 10 mg/kg IV
- Additional doses of 10% of the original may be administered for maintenance
Tiletamine/ zolazepam
- Not generally used but useful in larger lizards
- 5.5 mg/kg in a 55kg komodo dragon (Varanus komodoensis) led to easy handling within 30 minutes but heavy sedation the day after the anaesthetic
- 10-40 mg/kg IM- 8-20 minute induction, 2-10 hour recovery in smaller individuals
Xylazine
- Infrequently used
- 0.1-1.25 mg/kg IV, IM