Abstract

Spontaneous ventilation after induction of anaesthesia with intravenous alfaxalone or propofol was evaluated in a dose escalation study using 6 dogs. Each dog was dosed at 1×, 2×, 5×, 10× and 20× multiples of the labelled doses (2mg/kg for alfaxalone; 6.5mg/kg for propofol), until apnoea was observed. For each administration, the entire calculated dose was delivered over 1min. All 6 dogs ventilated spontaneously after labelled (1×) doses of each drug but became apnoeic at 5× dose of propofol versus 20× dose of alfaxalone. For propofol at 2× and 5× doses, 4 and 0 dogs ventilated spontaneously respectively. For alfaxalone at 2×, 5× and 10× doses all 6, 4 and 1 dog ventilated spontaneously, respectively. The median dose which induced apnoea was higher for alfaxalone (5×) than for propofol (2×) (p=0.05). We concluded that induction of anaesthesia with propofol is more likely to induce apnoea than with alfaxalone.

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