Gas anesthesia with medical grade 100 % oxygen is routinely used.
Includes: routine spay or neuter in our fully equipped surgical suite, at or about six months of age; pre-surgical physical exam; pre-anesthetic blood screening; i.v. catheter and fluids; Isoflurane
gas anesthesia with intraoperative monitoring of all vital signs by our licensed nurses, using state of the art equipment; postoperative antibiotics and pain preventives.
Not exact matches
Brandi and I used a small amount of
gas anesthesia along
with sedation and a local block to prevent any pain and to allow for quick removal.
If periodontal disease is caught early, then many times the problem can be treated
with medications and other methods, such as laser therapy and antibiotic gel placement into the deep pockets, while the pet is under isoflurane
gas anesthesia.
he said
gas is much easier to control b / c if a dog is having problems you just turn off the
gas,
with the iv
anesthesia, there is no way to bring the dog back quickly... my girls come out of the surgery running and playing, which they never have done at other vets... he is the best, he also works
with lots of rescues, and helps provide vet care for the rescues, there are abt 5 - 6 rescues running around his office, or in cages (big bunny, lizard, etc.).
Dental cleaning
with or without teeth extractions is considered a major procedure since your pet is under full (
gas)
anesthesia for the entire procedure.
Assist Vets
with surgical procedures (place IV catheters and fluids, administer proper medications, intubate, deliver and monitor
gas anesthesia, position patient on surgery table, understand appropriate sterile techniques, provide nursing care post operatively, clean and wrap surgical instruments and supplies, and operate the autoclave) Other related duties as assigned.
When we place your dog or cat safely under general
anesthesia, a breathing tube is inserted into the trachea (windpipe) to administer oxygen mixed
with the anesthetic
gas.
The Spay Shuttle has its own operating suite, complete
with autoclave and the same
gas anesthesia as our stationary clinic.
We use balanced
anesthesia — the intelligent combination of sedation, analgesia (pain control), induction (usually by IV injection), maintenance anaesthesia (usually
with isoflurane
gas), and patient monitoring (pulse oximeter, blood pressure monitor).
Keeping your kitty warm
with a circulating water blanket and other specialized equipment helps minimize the amount of
gas anesthesia needed, further ensuring your cat's safety and comfort.
The facility includes a well - stocked pharmacy, in - hospital surgery suite - complete
with ecg monitoring,
gas anesthesia and laser surgery equipment, in - house x-ray capabilities, a closely supervised hospitalization area, state of the art dental equipment - including digital x-rays and indoor boarding kennels
with outdoor walking areas.
We use
gas anesthetic agents; dogs and cats are given pre-operative tests depending on their age and condition to qualify them for
anesthesia; and patients are monitored while anesthetized both visibly and
with similar monitoring devices as used in human hospitals.
Our surgery suite can accommodate up to 3 patients at a time,
with gas anesthesia, monitoring equipment and a separate sterile environment.
Anesthesia is maintained
with a
gas anesthetic.
Dentals include our typical general
anesthesia work up (exam, pre-anesthetic blood work, IV catheter, IV fluids, pre-induction sedation and analgesia shots, induction, maintenance on
gas anesthesia) and maintenance (forced air Bair Hugger heating blanket, constant Veterinary or Licensed Veterinary Technician monitoring, constant breath monitoring
with respiratory meters, as well as external cuff blood pressure, continuous pulse oximeter, and heart rate and rhythm monitoring).
We induce pets
with propofol and we maintain
anesthesia with either sevoflurane or isoflurane
gas.
Hi Tara, just wanted to mention that I read in my research that for cats
with elevated kidney values it is a good idea to do dental cleanings using
gas as the only
anesthesia because
gas is not metabolized by kidneys like other
anesthesias are.
Induction
with gas anesthesia can be accomplished via an anesthetic chamber, a face mask or an ET tube.
Anesthesia should always be maintained
with an inhalant
gas such as Sevoflurane or Isoflurane, as additional doses of induction agents will unnecessarily prolong recovery.
Special features of the Correll Center space include digital radiography, digital ultrasound, digital endoscopy / laparoscopy,
gas and water - borne
anesthesia systems, steam and
gas instrument sterilization, compound and stereo microscopes
with digital cameras and a digital medical records system.
Install ICU ventilators (TAEMA) and
Anesthesia machines (TEAMA) at hospitals connecting the machines
with the medical
gases, diagnose and correct system malfunctions