+ All Categories
Home > Health & Medicine > Emergency and critical care of birds

Emergency and critical care of birds

Date post: 14-Nov-2014
Category:
Upload: arhvetslideshare
View: 410 times
Download: 2 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
Talk by Dr Stacey Gelis done in Bowral 15th June 2012
Popular Tags:
25
Emergency and Critical Care of Sick Birds Stacey Gelis BVSc(Hons) MACVSc ( Avian Health) Animal Referral Hospital 250 Parramatta Rd Homebush 2140
Transcript
Page 1: Emergency and critical care of birds

Emergency and Critical Care of Sick Birds

Stacey Gelis BVSc(Hons) MACVSc ( Avian Health)Animal Referral Hospital

250 Parramatta Rd Homebush 2140

Page 2: Emergency and critical care of birds

Patient AssessmentTo handle or not to handle…

…that is the question!

Page 3: Emergency and critical care of birds

Ooops!!

Page 4: Emergency and critical care of birds

Contraindications To HandlingExtreme dyspnoea

Prostration

Unresponsive to stimuli

Page 5: Emergency and critical care of birds

Beware of Small Patients

Page 6: Emergency and critical care of birds

Stop a Clinical Examination when..Bird closes its eyes in your handSudden weaknessFailure to grasp with both feetNo pressure when item inserted in beakImmediately place into heated hospital cage

+/- oxygenObtain a thorough history

Page 7: Emergency and critical care of birds

Hospitalisation FacilitiesHeat 28-32 degrees CHumidityOxygenNebulisationQuietSubdued LightAvailable food

Page 8: Emergency and critical care of birds

Fluid TherapyIntravenous

Jugular (right)UlnarMedial tarsal

SubcutaneousInguinal ( bilaterally)interscapular

IntraosseousUlnatibiotarsus

OralCrop gavage

Page 9: Emergency and critical care of birds
Page 10: Emergency and critical care of birds

Calculating Fluid RequirementsDaily maintenance: 5% BW/dayPlus % dehydrationAim to replace 50% deficit first 24 hrs

In acute fluid loss, 20-25% of deficit is replaced in first 4-6 hrs.

Then the other 50% over next 24-48 hrs

Page 11: Emergency and critical care of birds

Fluid VolumesIV fluid Rates

Crystalloids: bolus 10 ml/kg or 10-25ml/kg over several mins

Colloids: 3-5 ml/kgTransient bradycardiaDecompensatory phase of shock (bradycardia,

hypotension, hypothermia) Slow IV/IO bolus over 10 mins of 7.5% hypertonic saline (3ml/kg)

+ colloids (3ml/g)Fluid overload:

Increased RR Cardiac dysrhythmia Agitation Collapse

Page 12: Emergency and critical care of birds

Subcutaneous Fluid Volumes5-10% bodyweight bid-tid

Ensure all fluids are WARMED 37-39 DegC

Page 13: Emergency and critical care of birds

Crop Volumes30ml/kg q 6-8 hrs or 3-5% bodyweightInitial to Max Crop Volumes

Finch: 0.1-0.5 q 4hrsBudgie: 0.5-3.0 q 6 hCockatiel: 1-8 q 6hSun conure: 7-15 q 6hCockatoo: 10-40 q 8-12 hrs

Page 14: Emergency and critical care of birds

Oral Rehydration/Nutrition

Page 15: Emergency and critical care of birds

Fluid TypesHartmann’s solution0.45% NaCl and 2.5% glucose0.9% NaClColloids eg Gelofusin (10-15 ml/kg IV q 8hrs)Fluids should be WARMED

Page 16: Emergency and critical care of birds

Blood transfusionsIndicated when PCV <15-20%**Circulating Blood volume= 7-10% BWCan easily tolerate 30% acute blood lossPCV can take 24 hrs to stabiliseTransfusion volume: 10-20% blood volumeHomologous vs Heterologouss

Homologous: RBC survival 9-11 dayHeterologous: 1-3 daysReactions rare

Page 17: Emergency and critical care of birds

Medication Injection SitesIntravenousIntramuscular

Pectoral musclesStart low, alternate sites

Subcutaneous eg enrofloxacin diluted with saline for

repeated injections

Page 18: Emergency and critical care of birds

Dyspnoeic PatientsUpper Vs Lower Respiratory DiseaseUpper:

Open beak breathing with high pitched squeakForward leaning postureAcute- good body condition

Lower:Poor body condition- chronic?Coelomic distension

Page 19: Emergency and critical care of birds

Stabilising Dyspnoeic PatientsOxygen therapyNebulisationRelieve upper respiratory obstructionCoelomocentesisOvocentesisAir sac cannulation

Page 20: Emergency and critical care of birds

Nebulisation ProtocolsF10 concentrate

1ml to 250 ml tap waterNebulise 10-20 mls for 30 mins tid-qid

Acetylcysteine 20% (Mucomyst)22mg/ml sterile water

Piperacillin 10mg/ml saline 10-30 mins q 6-12 hrs

Amphotericin B

Page 21: Emergency and critical care of birds

Diagnostic SamplingFaecal Exam

Wet prep, D-Q, Gram Stain Crop washBlood Sampling

Li Hep and blood smearRadiology

Lat AND VD viewsUltrasonographyEndoscopyCoelomocentesis

Page 22: Emergency and critical care of birds

Assessing Urofaeces

Page 23: Emergency and critical care of birds

Cardiopulmonary ArrestIntubation , 100% oxygen; PPV q 4-5 sec

Don’t overinflate birdDon’t blow into ET tube- zoonoses!!

CPRAdrenaline 0.5- 1 mg/kgAtropine 0.5mg/kgPlus fluid bolusDoxapram 20 mg/kgNaHCo3: 5mmol/Kg IV oncePrognosis is better for acute arrest eg Iso

overdose than with chronic illness

Page 24: Emergency and critical care of birds

Other Emergency MedicationsAnalgesics

Butorphanol 1-2 mg/kg IM q 4-8 hrsMeloxicam 0.3-0.5 mg/kg PO, IM sid-bidTramadol 4-5 mg/kg

AntibioticsEnrofloxacin 15 mg/kg bid PO or diluted IM/SCAmox/Clav; ticarcillin- 100-150 mg/kg bidTrim/Sulph- 30 mg/kg bid

Chelating agentsCaEDTA 50-75 mg/kg IM BID

Page 25: Emergency and critical care of birds

Thank You!


Recommended