Department of Anatomy and Physiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS.
Midwest Veterinary Services, Inc., Oakland, NE.
J Anim Sci. 2020 Nov 1;98(11). doi: 10.1093/jas/skaa320.
CO2 surgical lasers are widely used for procedures in veterinary and human medicine. There is evidence to suggest surgery using a CO2 laser reduces pain and swelling and improves healing time compared with surgery with a scalpel. Millions of piglets in North America are surgically castrated each year using a scalpel. Therefore, piglet welfare may be improved by making refinements to the surgical procedure. The objectives of this preliminary study were to determine the ability of a CO2 surgical laser to (1) reduce pain and (2) improve wound healing of piglets undergoing surgical castration. Two-day-old male Yorkshire × Landrace piglets were used and randomly assigned to 1 of 3 treatments (n = 10 piglets/treatment group): surgical castration with the CO2 laser, surgical castration with a scalpel, or sham (uncastrated control). Piglets were video recorded in their pens for 1 hr preprocedure and from 0 to 2, 6 to 8, and at 24 hr postprocedure for behavior scoring. Surgical site images were collected at baseline, 0, 8, 24, 48, 72, 96, 120, 144, and 168 hr postcastration for wound healing assessment. Infrared thermography images of the surgical site were also taken at baseline, 0, 0.5, 8, and 24 hr postprocedure to assess inflammation. Finally, blood was collected from each piglet at baseline and 0.5 hr postcastration to assess cortisol levels, prostaglandin E metabolite and pig-major acute phase protein concentration. Laser-castrated piglets displayed more pain behaviors across the observation period than scalpel-castrated piglets (P = 0.05). Laser-castrated piglets also displayed significantly more agonistic behavior than both scalpel-castrated piglets (P = 0.005) and sham piglets (P = 0.036); yet, laser-castrated piglets had significantly lower temperatures at the site of incision compared with scalpel-castrated piglets (P = 0.0211). There was no significant difference in wound healing or any of the blood parameters assessed between laser-castrated and scalpel-castrated piglets. There was evidence of thermal tissue damage on the scrotum of piglets that were castrated using the CO2 laser. This may have resulted in the unremarkable healing time and the increased pain behavior observed in this study. The surgical laser technique should be refined before conclusions can be made regarding the utility of a CO2 laser for piglet castration.
二氧化碳手术激光被广泛应用于兽医和人类医学领域的各种手术。有证据表明,与手术刀相比,使用二氧化碳激光进行手术可以减轻疼痛和肿胀,同时加快愈合速度。在北美,每年有数百万头小猪采用手术刀进行去势手术。因此,通过改进手术程序可以提高小猪的福利。本初步研究的目的是确定二氧化碳手术激光是否能够:(1)减轻疼痛;(2)改善去势手术中小猪的伤口愈合。使用 2 日龄雄性约克夏×长白猪,并将其随机分为 3 种处理组(每组 10 头猪):二氧化碳激光去势组、手术刀去势组和假手术(未去势)对照组。在术前 1 小时和术后 0 至 2 小时、6 至 8 小时以及 24 小时,对小猪在围栏中的行为进行录像评分。在基线、0 小时、8 小时、24 小时、48 小时、72 小时、96 小时、120 小时、144 小时和 168 小时时采集手术部位图像,评估伤口愈合情况。在基线、0 小时、0.5 小时、8 小时和 24 小时时还对手术部位进行红外热成像,以评估炎症情况。最后,在基线和去势后 0.5 小时,从每头猪采集血液,以评估皮质醇水平、前列腺素 E 代谢物和猪主要急性期蛋白浓度。与手术刀去势的小猪相比,激光去势的小猪在整个观察期内表现出更多的疼痛行为(P = 0.05)。激光去势的小猪还表现出比手术刀去势的小猪(P = 0.005)和假手术的小猪(P = 0.036)更多的攻击行为;然而,激光去势的小猪切口部位的温度明显低于手术刀去势的小猪(P = 0.0211)。激光去势和手术刀去势的小猪之间的伤口愈合或任何评估的血液参数均无显著差异。使用二氧化碳激光去势的小猪阴囊组织出现热损伤的证据。这可能导致本研究中观察到的愈合时间无明显差异和疼痛行为增加。在得出二氧化碳激光用于小猪去势的实际效用的结论之前,应进一步改进手术激光技术。