Effect of nose twitching on the pupillary dilation in awake and anesthetized horses
Carlota Emilia Mascaró Triedo, Sahra Karar, Maha Abunemeh, Karine Portier

TL;DR
This study examines how nose twitching affects pupil size in horses under different sedation and anesthesia states.
Contribution
The study reveals that nose twitching causes pupillary dilation in awake horses, with effects modified by sedatives like acepromazine and romifidine.
Findings
Nose twitching significantly increased pupil length in non-sedated horses.
Acepromazine enhanced the dilation effect of nose twitching on both pupil length and height.
Romifidine administration eliminated the dilation effect observed with nose twitching.
Abstract
Pupillometry is used in humans to monitor pain, nociception and analgesia. This single-center, non-randomized, non-blinded intervention trial, evaluated the effect of nose twitching on the pupil size in awake, sedated, and anesthetized horses. Pupil height (H) and length (L) were measured before (Be) and after (Af) nose twitching in fourteen non-painful adult awake horses (T0). The percentage of variation (PSV) was calculated (PSVTn = [(TnAf-TnBe)/TnBe]*100). Measurements were repeated (Tn) after acepromazine (0.04 mg kg−1 IV) (T1), romifidine (0.04 mg kg−1 IV) (T2), morphine (0.1 mg kg−1 IV) (T3), after anesthesia induction with diazepam (0.05 mg kg−1 IV) and ketamine (2.2 mg kg−1 IV), at the time the horse was placed on the operating table (T4) and when the expiratory fraction of sevoflurane was 2% (T5). HAf vs. HBe, LAf vs. LBe as well as PSVH vs. PSVL at each time were compared with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVeterinary Pharmacology and Anesthesia · Veterinary Equine Medical Research · Essential Oils and Antimicrobial Activity
