5th INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF MULTIDISCIPLINARY STUDIES IN MEDICAL SCIENCES, Ankara, Türkiye, 22 - 25 Eylül 2022, ss.235-236, (Özet Bildiri)
Anesthetics are used to eliminate the pain and pain of the patient and to ensure the safety of the physician and his / her assistants in cesarean section operations, which are frequently performed in Veterinary Obstetrics and gynecology. Premedication in caesarean section operations prevents the stress and anxiety that may occur in the mother preoperative during intravenous catheterization and oxygenation. However, a balanced and effective premedication results in a reduction in the amount of anesthetic agent to be used for induction. Sedative-hypnotic (thiopental, propofol, alphaxalone, etomidate), dissociative (ketamine HCl) and inhalation agents (Isoflurane, sevoflurane, Desflurane) are frequently used for induction. The anaesthetic and analgesic substances used in pregnant animals show their effect by crossing the blood-brain barrier due to their physicochemical properties. This situation causes anesthetic agents to easily pass the placental barrier and cause adverse effects on the fetus. There is no protocol that can anesthetize only the mother without affecting the fetus. For this reason, an anesthesia protocol should be chosen that has the least effect on both the mother andthe fetus. In this study, 2 different anesthesia protocols used in cesarean section patients brought to Ataturk University Veterinary Faculty Animal Hospital were compared.