Cargando…

Cooling Methods Used to Manage Heat-Related Illness in Dogs Presented to Primary Care Veterinary Practices during 2016–2018 in the UK

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Heat-related illness (HRI) is a potentially fatal disorder that can occur in dogs following exercise or exposure to hot environments. While many risk factors can affect the probability of HRI occurring, the priority for treating dogs with HRI is early and rapid reduction in their cor...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hall, Emily J., Carter, Anne J., Bradbury, Jude, Beard, Sian, Gilbert, Sophie, Barfield, Dominic, O’Neill, Dan G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10385239/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37505869
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci10070465
_version_ 1785081356845318144
author Hall, Emily J.
Carter, Anne J.
Bradbury, Jude
Beard, Sian
Gilbert, Sophie
Barfield, Dominic
O’Neill, Dan G.
author_facet Hall, Emily J.
Carter, Anne J.
Bradbury, Jude
Beard, Sian
Gilbert, Sophie
Barfield, Dominic
O’Neill, Dan G.
author_sort Hall, Emily J.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Heat-related illness (HRI) is a potentially fatal disorder that can occur in dogs following exercise or exposure to hot environments. While many risk factors can affect the probability of HRI occurring, the priority for treating dogs with HRI is early and rapid reduction in their core body temperature to limit disease progression. Cold-water immersion (conductive cooling) and water spray with air movement (evaporative cooling) are the recommended treatments for dogs with HRI, with cooling attempts in dogs with HRI being strongly advised to take place prior to transportation for veterinary care. This retrospective study of cooling methods used in UK veterinary practices during 2016–2018 reports that just 21.70% of dogs were cooled prior to transport, and only 23.97% of dogs were cooled using the recommended methods between 2016 and 2018. These results highlight the need for clearer messaging to the public and to veterinary professionals on optimal management of dogs with HRI, with priority on promoting wider sharing of the advice to “cool first, transport second”. ABSTRACT: The management of heat-related illness (HRI) in dogs has received limited attention in the veterinary literature, especially regarding effective cooling methods. Guidelines published in 2016 for prehospital management of dogs with HRI advised “cool first, transport second”, and recommended using cold-water immersion and evaporative cooling (water application with air movement) as the optimal approaches to reduce the patient’s temperature. The current retrospective cross-sectional observation study analysed electronic patient records from the VetCompass programme to describe the cooling methods used in dogs with HRI presented to primary care veterinary practices during 2016–2018. Of 623 HRI events identified, 341 (54.74%, 95% CI 50.81–58.60%) included information on cooling in their clinical record. Of these, 74/341 (21.70%, 95% CI 17.65–26.38%) were cooled prior to transport for veterinary care. Overall, 23.97% (95% CI 19.24–29.44%) were cooled using one of the two recommended cooling methods, whilst the most common cooling method recorded was the application of wet towels (51.31%, 95% CI 45.34–57.24%). Canine cooling guidance and messaging in both the public and veterinary sectors requires urgent review to ensure that the most effective cooling methods are promoted because delays to canine temperature reduction worsen patient outcomes.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10385239
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103852392023-07-30 Cooling Methods Used to Manage Heat-Related Illness in Dogs Presented to Primary Care Veterinary Practices during 2016–2018 in the UK Hall, Emily J. Carter, Anne J. Bradbury, Jude Beard, Sian Gilbert, Sophie Barfield, Dominic O’Neill, Dan G. Vet Sci Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Heat-related illness (HRI) is a potentially fatal disorder that can occur in dogs following exercise or exposure to hot environments. While many risk factors can affect the probability of HRI occurring, the priority for treating dogs with HRI is early and rapid reduction in their core body temperature to limit disease progression. Cold-water immersion (conductive cooling) and water spray with air movement (evaporative cooling) are the recommended treatments for dogs with HRI, with cooling attempts in dogs with HRI being strongly advised to take place prior to transportation for veterinary care. This retrospective study of cooling methods used in UK veterinary practices during 2016–2018 reports that just 21.70% of dogs were cooled prior to transport, and only 23.97% of dogs were cooled using the recommended methods between 2016 and 2018. These results highlight the need for clearer messaging to the public and to veterinary professionals on optimal management of dogs with HRI, with priority on promoting wider sharing of the advice to “cool first, transport second”. ABSTRACT: The management of heat-related illness (HRI) in dogs has received limited attention in the veterinary literature, especially regarding effective cooling methods. Guidelines published in 2016 for prehospital management of dogs with HRI advised “cool first, transport second”, and recommended using cold-water immersion and evaporative cooling (water application with air movement) as the optimal approaches to reduce the patient’s temperature. The current retrospective cross-sectional observation study analysed electronic patient records from the VetCompass programme to describe the cooling methods used in dogs with HRI presented to primary care veterinary practices during 2016–2018. Of 623 HRI events identified, 341 (54.74%, 95% CI 50.81–58.60%) included information on cooling in their clinical record. Of these, 74/341 (21.70%, 95% CI 17.65–26.38%) were cooled prior to transport for veterinary care. Overall, 23.97% (95% CI 19.24–29.44%) were cooled using one of the two recommended cooling methods, whilst the most common cooling method recorded was the application of wet towels (51.31%, 95% CI 45.34–57.24%). Canine cooling guidance and messaging in both the public and veterinary sectors requires urgent review to ensure that the most effective cooling methods are promoted because delays to canine temperature reduction worsen patient outcomes. MDPI 2023-07-15 /pmc/articles/PMC10385239/ /pubmed/37505869 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci10070465 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hall, Emily J.
Carter, Anne J.
Bradbury, Jude
Beard, Sian
Gilbert, Sophie
Barfield, Dominic
O’Neill, Dan G.
Cooling Methods Used to Manage Heat-Related Illness in Dogs Presented to Primary Care Veterinary Practices during 2016–2018 in the UK
title Cooling Methods Used to Manage Heat-Related Illness in Dogs Presented to Primary Care Veterinary Practices during 2016–2018 in the UK
title_full Cooling Methods Used to Manage Heat-Related Illness in Dogs Presented to Primary Care Veterinary Practices during 2016–2018 in the UK
title_fullStr Cooling Methods Used to Manage Heat-Related Illness in Dogs Presented to Primary Care Veterinary Practices during 2016–2018 in the UK
title_full_unstemmed Cooling Methods Used to Manage Heat-Related Illness in Dogs Presented to Primary Care Veterinary Practices during 2016–2018 in the UK
title_short Cooling Methods Used to Manage Heat-Related Illness in Dogs Presented to Primary Care Veterinary Practices during 2016–2018 in the UK
title_sort cooling methods used to manage heat-related illness in dogs presented to primary care veterinary practices during 2016–2018 in the uk
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10385239/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37505869
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci10070465
work_keys_str_mv AT hallemilyj coolingmethodsusedtomanageheatrelatedillnessindogspresentedtoprimarycareveterinarypracticesduring20162018intheuk
AT carterannej coolingmethodsusedtomanageheatrelatedillnessindogspresentedtoprimarycareveterinarypracticesduring20162018intheuk
AT bradburyjude coolingmethodsusedtomanageheatrelatedillnessindogspresentedtoprimarycareveterinarypracticesduring20162018intheuk
AT beardsian coolingmethodsusedtomanageheatrelatedillnessindogspresentedtoprimarycareveterinarypracticesduring20162018intheuk
AT gilbertsophie coolingmethodsusedtomanageheatrelatedillnessindogspresentedtoprimarycareveterinarypracticesduring20162018intheuk
AT barfielddominic coolingmethodsusedtomanageheatrelatedillnessindogspresentedtoprimarycareveterinarypracticesduring20162018intheuk
AT oneilldang coolingmethodsusedtomanageheatrelatedillnessindogspresentedtoprimarycareveterinarypracticesduring20162018intheuk