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Prevalence of laryngeal paresis in dogs undergoing general anaesthesia

C. Broome, H. M. Burbidge, D. U. Pfeiffer

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To estimate the prevalence of laryngeal paresis within a selected population of dogs and identify some of the distinguishing characteristics of affected dogs. Design: A prospective study involving laryngoscopic examination of 250 dogs. Procedure: The laryngeal movements of 250 dogs undergoing general anaesthesia were observed. The severity of laryngeal paresis in these dogs was graded (0 = normal laryngeal movements, 4 = bilateral laryngeal paralysis). The following information was also recorded for each dog: age, sex, weight, breed, condition score, anaesthetic protocol, clinical suspicion of disease and observer. Results: Twenty five percent of the dogs examined had some degree of laryngeal paresis. Affected dogs were significantly older than unaffected dogs (P <0.001). There was a trend for the severity of laryngeal paresis to increase with age. There was no difference between the sexes. Dogs with laryngeal paresis were significantly heavier than normal animals (P <0.02). Overweight animals had a significantly higher laryngeal grade than those with a normal condition score (P <0.05). Labrador Retrievers and Rottweilers had a significantly higher risk of having laryngeal paresis (P <0.05). Clinical suspicion was found to have high diagnostic value. An intra-class correlation coefficient for inter-rater reliability between the two observers was 0.95. Conclusions: Laryngeal paresis had a high prevalence in the animals surveyed and was strongly associated with age and breed. The results of this study are consistent with the concept of a progressive degenerative disease with a breed susceptibility. Clinical suspicion for the presence of the disease was a reliable indicator. The grading system used had a high degree of inter-observer agreement.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)769-772
JournalAustralian Veterinary Journal
Volume78
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2000
Externally publishedYes

Research Keywords

  • Canine
  • Dogs
  • Laryngeal paralysis
  • Laryngeal paresis

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