Albright Julia D, Seddighi Reza M, Ng Zenithson, Sun Xiaocun, Rezac D J
Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Tennessee-Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, United States of America.
Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Tennessee-Knoxville, Knoxville, TN, United States of America.
PeerJ. 2017 Jul 31;5:e3659. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3659. eCollection 2017.
Previous studies in human patients suggest depth of sedation may be affected by environmental noise or music; however, related data in domestic animals is limited. The objective of the current study was to investigate the effect of noise and music on dexmedetomidine-induced (DM- 10 µg/kg, IM) sedation in 10 dogs.
In a crossover design, post-DM injection dogs were immediately subjected to recorded human voices at either 55-60 decibel (dB) (Noise 1) or 80-85 dB (Noise 2); classical music at 45-50 dB (Music); or background noise of 40-45 dB (Control+). Control- included IM saline injection and exposure to 40-45 dB background noise. Sedation was assessed via monitoring spontaneous behavior and accelerometry (delta-g) throughout three 20-min evaluation periods: baseline, noise exposure, and post-treatment. Sedation was further assessed during two restraint tests at 30 min (R1) and 40 min (R2) post-injection. A mixed model for crossover design was used to determine the effect of noise exposure and time on either spontaneous behavior scores or delta-g. The restraint scores were analyzed using a two-way repeated measures ANOVA.
Spontaneous behavior scores indicated less sedation during Noise 2 compared to Control+ ( = 0.05). R2 restraint scores for all DM treatments except Noise 2 indicated significantly higher sedation than Control- [C+ ( = 0.003), M ( = 0.014) and N1 ( = 0.044)].
Results suggest that the quality of sedation is negatively impacted by high-intensity noise conditions (80-85 dB), but exposure to music did not improve sedation in this population of research dogs.
先前针对人类患者的研究表明,镇静深度可能会受到环境噪音或音乐的影响;然而,有关家畜的相关数据有限。本研究的目的是调查噪音和音乐对10只犬只右美托咪定诱导(肌肉注射10μg/kg右美托咪定)镇静的影响。
采用交叉设计,右美托咪定注射后,犬只立即暴露于55 - 60分贝(dB)的录制人声(噪音1)或80 - 85 dB(噪音2);45 - 50 dB的古典音乐(音乐);或40 - 45 dB的背景噪音(对照+)。对照-包括肌肉注射生理盐水并暴露于40 - 45 dB背景噪音。在三个20分钟的评估期内,通过监测自发行为和加速度计(增量g)来评估镇静情况:基线期、噪音暴露期和治疗后期。在注射后30分钟(R1)和40分钟(R2)的两次约束测试中进一步评估镇静情况。采用交叉设计的混合模型来确定噪音暴露和时间对自发行为评分或增量g的影响。使用双向重复测量方差分析来分析约束评分。
自发行为评分表明,与对照+相比,噪音2期间的镇静程度较低(P = 0.05)。除噪音2外,所有右美托咪定治疗的R2约束评分均表明镇静程度显著高于对照- [对照+(P = 0.003)、音乐(P = 0.014)和噪音1(P = 0.044)]。
结果表明,高强度噪音条件(80 - 85 dB)会对镇静质量产生负面影响,但接触音乐并未改善这群研究犬的镇静效果。