Timing-controlled concept for extubation in brachycephalic dogs: α2–bridged on-demand extubation
Shotaro Nagahama

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new timing-controlled extubation method for brachycephalic dogs to reduce respiratory complications during recovery from anesthesia.
Contribution
The novel A2-ODE concept decouples volatile washout from extubation timing using α2-agonist sedation and atipamezole.
Findings
A2-ODE aims to avoid extubation during a vulnerable emergence phase by using α2-agonist sedation.
The protocol allows clinician-controlled timing of awakening and extubation in brachycephalic dogs.
The concept is presented as a hypothesis-generating framework for future clinical studies.
Abstract
Brachycephalic dogs are overrepresented among peri and post-anesthetic respiratory complications, and many serious adverse events in small animals cluster around extubation and early recovery. A recurring clinical problem is a mismatch between apparent behavioral emergence and incomplete recovery of upper-airway stability, such that extubation may occur while residual anesthetic effect still depresses pharyngeal dilator activity and protective reflexes. Brachycephalic dogs have anatomically constrained, load-sensitive upper airways, making emergence a phase in which behavioral arousal may precede full recovery of airway stability. We propose a timing-controlled concept for extubation in brachycephalic dogs—α2–Bridged on-Demand Extubation (A2-ODE)—that decouples volatile washout from the timing of awakening and extubation. In A2-ODE, the vaporizer is turned off and washout is completed,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeuroscience of respiration and sleep · Veterinary Pharmacology and Anesthesia · Respiratory Support and Mechanisms
