The Benefits of Using Veterinary Inhalation Anesthesia Machine
Jun. 09, 2025
Small Animal Inhalation Anesthesia Machine for Uses
Generally, there are some risks and side effects in animal intravenous anesthetics surgery.
APC Med supply professional and honest service.
Large damage to animal health
● Discomfort is easy to occur when the injection is given.
● It can possibly cause severe respiratory and cardiovascular depression during induction of anesthesia.
Low efficiency
● Complicated procedures in pre-intravenous anesthetics.
● Not easy to control the administration.
● Depth and level of anaesthesia can not be effectively controlled.
● Unable to anesthetize multiple animals simultaneously.
Unsafety
● High risk to animal death
● Personnel easily bitten or scratched by laboratory animals
Limited applications
● Only used for a small range of animal surgeries, such as with myasthenia gravis.
● Unable to accurately reflect the signs of animal metabolism, such as with drug toxicity evaluation research.
Inhalation gas anesthetics can be used safely and effectively for general animal anesthesia surgeries. In this article, we introduce the main benefits of inhalation anesthesia, and overview of RWD animal inhalation anesthesia machines.
Inhalation Gas Anesthesia Benefits
Animal Welfare
● Inhalation anesthesia hardly interferes with an animal’s liver and kidney metabolism.
● Non-invasive operation and low complication risk after recovery, thus ensuring the welfare of laboratory animals.
Animal Safety
● The output concentration and depth of anesthesia can be precisely controlled.
● Oxygen is supplied along with anesthesia, ensuring oxygenation to the body, and reducing risks involved with anesthesia.
● Helps protect internal organs.
● Can easily be used to suppress stress response.
Personnel Safety
● Non-invasive anesthetic wasted gases with the help of gas evacuation apparatus and closed-circle connection design.
● No need to get in touch with injection needle and avoid the bitten and scratched by animal.
● Easy operation and set up, also could support multiple channel experiment with different experiment requirement.
Convenient
● Real-time adjustment of anesthesia status, stable and rapid recovery from anesthesia, easy to operation.
● Multiple animals can be anesthetized simultaneously, simply, and efficiently.
Wide Range of Application
● Used for rats, mice, hamsters, guinea pigs, rabbits, cats, dogs, and other animals weighing less than 100 kg (220 lb).
● Prolonged anesthesia: such as in open thoracotomy, imaging observation surgery, etc.
● Abbreviated anesthesia: such as with orbital blood collection from rats, marking animals, simple animal trauma treatment, etc.
● Overdosing of anesthesia: such as with animal euthanasia, in-depth study of anesthesia, etc.
Easy to Use
● Simple to operate and easy to learn how to use.
● Easy to set up and disassemble.
RWD Small Animal Anesthesia Machines
R500 Compact Small Animal anesthesia machine
Key message: A Standard and Easy Choice
Features:
● Small size, saving laboratory space.
● Ability to attach different components to meet diversified experimental needs; such as extended flow meter components (Different gas sources such as laughing gas, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, etc. can be attached).
R540 enhanced small animal anesthesia machine
Key message: A Classic Choice and Best-seller for the Past Ten Years
Features:
● Wall-mount design, can be easily installed and hung on the wall to make full use of laboratory space.
● Stainless steel handle, convenient to be picked up and taken on the go, moved around, or used at any time.
R550 Multi-output animal anesthesia machine
Key message: first choice for high-throughput anesthesia
Features:
● The unique design of the induction box and anesthesia mask can simultaneously induce and maintain anesthesia, saving experimental time and improving work efficiency.
● The air channel for each anesthesia mask is able to be controlled independently, allowing five small animals to receive a proper amount of anesthesia simultaneously, or to give anesthesia only to select animals that need it.
R520/R530 Moveable small animal anesthesia machine
Key message: the preferred choice for mobility
Features:
● Provides integrate gas supply, induction of anesthesia, recovery of waste anesthetic gases, is convenient to set up and take down, and saves space.
● Swivel casters with locks provide easy stop and go, making mobile operation and unified management convenient.
Recommended Solutions for Animal Surgery and Modeling Applications
Multi-function animal anesthesia solutions
● It can meet the anesthetic needs of 1-5 animals at the same time, and is compatible with MRI, PET, and SPECT imaging systems.
● The tube and mask can be placed and fixed arbitrarily on the desktop, and the height of the mask can be adjusted up and down.
● Provides active waste gas recovery to better protect the physical and mental health of operating personnel.
Stereotaxic animal anesthesia solutions
● Different types of locators and adapters can be exchanged to meet the needs of different stereotaxic brain surgeries.
● Provides active waste gas recovery to better protect the physical and mental health of operating personnel.
Combination of Ventilation to Anesthesia System for Small Animal
● Surgery for animals that cannot breathe on their own due to long-term application or certain diseases that cause respiratory dysfunction.
● Suitable for mice, rats, guinea pigs and other animals weighing less than 1 kg (2.2 lb).
Combination of Ventilation to Anesthesia System for Large Animal
● Suitable for use on pigs, monkeys, dogs, cats, and other large animals weighing around 100 kg (220 lb), this is a complete set of solutions for respiratory monitoring under anesthesia, bringing more security to large animals undergoing experimentation.
Some References
Inhalation Anaesthesia Agents - WSAVA Congress - VIN
In veterinary practice, maintenance of anaesthesia with inhalation agents is standard practice because of the simplicity, reliability, predictability, and good recovery quality even after long procedures. Their pharmacological characteristics and administration via the lungs, which act as a damping reservoir, means that microprocessor controlled administration with problem recognition and management is achievable in the near future.
In the early to mid-19th century, inhalation agents were used by people experimenting with "gases at public inhalations for ladies and gentlemen!" Nitrous oxide failed as a sole anaesthetic agent, although veterinary anaesthesia using it was attempted by Sir Humphrey Davy and his students conducting narcosis experiments on dogs and chickens 25 years before human anaesthesia was "discovered." The first administration of general anaesthesia is credited to Dr. Crawford Long of Jefferson County, Georgia, USA in March using ether. Chloroform was initially used in the UK to provide pain relief during birth, such as by Dr. John Snow for Queen Victoria. However there were high levels of patient mortality with ether or chloroform anaesthesia due to limitations of the agents, crude equipment, and lack of use of oxygen. Many of the early anaesthetists became addicted to the drugs they used, possibly due to chronically high levels of occupational pollution from open face masks.
Inhalation anaesthetics no longer used include chloroform, cyclopropane, ether and Trilene. Over the last 25 years we have seen the decline in use of methoxyflurane, enflurane, nitrous oxide, and more recently halothane, although methoxyflurane is again being used in humans to provide immediate analgesia post trauma.
Veterinary anaesthesia has a high risk of mortality compared to human anaesthesia. Despite large improvements in anaesthetic outcome of animals, in part due to better anaesthetic agents, mortality rates in veterinary anaesthesia today are still high: 100 to 500 deaths per 100,000 anaesthetics for cats and dogs; 350 deaths per 100,000 anaesthetised horses as compared to 1 death per 100,000 to 300,000 anaesthetised humans. Recovery from anaesthesia accounts for up to 50% of deaths in veterinary anaesthesia which should be of concern.
Isoflurane, Sevoflurane and Desflurane
These newer agents have faster inductions and recoveries, less metabolism, less cardiac depression, higher heart rates, lower ventricular arrhythmogenicity, better tissue perfusion, minimal liver metabolism and renal excretion. There is better tolerance of deep anaesthesia, lower morbidity and mortality, and reduced occupational health considerations from exposure to waste anaesthetic gas. The downside includes agent cost, equipment cost, and managing volatility (requiring more accurate vaporizers).
Table 1. Properties of inhalation anaesthetics
Agent
Blood gas solubility
ml vapor/ml liquid @ 20°C
Metabolism%
MAC dogs
Apnoeic index x MAC
Nitrous oxide
0.47
gas
0
200% ±
ND
Desflurane
0.42
210
0
7.20
ND
Sevoflurane
0.68
185
3
If you want to learn more, please visit our website Veterinary Inhalation Anesthesia Machine.
2.10
3.5
Isoflurane
1.46
196
0.2
1.30
2.6
Halothane
2.54
227
20
0.9
2.9
Methoxyflurane
15.0
207
50
0.25
3.4
Solubility = speed of uptake and onset of action.
Sevoflurane is half as soluble in blood as isoflurane, which is approximately half as soluble in blood as halothane (Table 1 & Graph). Desflurane is slightly less soluble than sevoflurane. The more insoluble an anaesthetic, the faster its anaesthetic induction, the more rapid the changes in depth and the faster is anaesthesia recovery. The speed of a mask induction using sevoflurane or desflurane is faster compared to halothane and to a lesser extent isoflurane. However both humans and animals tend to breathe sevoflurane better than isoflurane or desflurane resulting in a smoother and more even induction.
Wake-up after induction: thiopentone, propofol, Alfaxan®, fentanyl and to a lesser extent ketamine are commonly used for induction of anaesthesia but their rapid redistribution and elimination often result in animals "waking up" before a stable level of inhalation anaesthesia is achieved. Subtle differences between inhalation anaesthetics including speed of onset, as well as the efficiency of the delivery equipment, becomes more important to prevent "wake up" typically observed 5 minutes after induction (Graph). These differences also affect the ease of controlling anaesthetic depth during surgery, although provision of good preemptive analgesia will also dampen the response to surgical stimulation.
GraphCirculatory Function
All inhalation anaesthetics cause a dose-dependent reduction in mean arterial pressure which is caused by a dose-dependent decrease in cardiac output and stroke volume. There is a tendency for less cardiac depression with isoflurane, sevoflurane, and desflurane at deep levels of anaesthesia (2.5 to 3.0 MAC). The cardiovascular system seems to be more tolerant of changes in anaesthetic depth with isoflurane or sevoflurane compared to halothane. It should be noted that these cardiovascular differences are affected by the degree of hypoventilation (i.e., increasing arterial PaCO2 causes sympathetic stimulation) so comparisons are typically made under positive pressure ventilation to a normal, awake PaCO2.
The arrhythmogenic potential for halothane is much greater than that for isoflurane, sevoflurane, or desflurane. This is especially important for any patient with cardiac disease manifested by an arrhythmia. In such patients (e.g., heart disease, post blunt chest trauma, or gastric dilatation) halothane may be contraindicated.
Tissue perfusion is better with isoflurane, sevoflurane, or desflurane at normal arterial PaCO2 levels when compared to halothane. This is an important benefit for geriatric animals with reduced hepatic or renal function. Better blood flow helps maintain tissue oxygenation, hepatic metabolism, renal excretory function, and is directly correlated to blood flow. However, it is important to remember that hypocapnoea (a rising PaCO2) causes vasoconstriction which reduces tissue perfusion. Positive pressure ventilation can reduce this effect but causes a decrease in cardiac output, virtually negating any benefit to tissue perfusion. Therefore inhalation anaesthetics that cause less respiratory depression such as sevoflurane will result in better overall tissue blood flow (see apnoeic index below).
Provision of adequate additional analgesia before painful stimulation will reduce circulating catecholamines which cause vasoconstriction, therefore reducing peripheral perfusion.
Respiratory Function
All inhalation anaesthetics cause a dose-dependent respiratory depression, as evidenced by a rise in arterial carbon dioxide tension with increasing anaesthetic dose. In canine patients, isoflurane and desflurane cause more respiratory depression when compared to sevoflurane. In cats, isoflurane has been shown to cause less respiratory depression when compared to halothane (there is no comparative data for sevoflurane or desflurane).
Apnoeic index is the anaesthetic concentration at which spontaneous ventilation ceases and is used as a measure to compare respiratory depression. The apnoeic index for sevoflurane in dogs is approximately 1/3 higher than for halothane or isoflurane indicating it's lower respiratory depression (Table 1).
Animals that breathe better during anaesthesia have two benefits:
Anaesthetic depth tends to be more constant and depth is more easily adjusted.
Extreme hypocapnoea causes cardiovascular depression, reduces tissue perfusion, and increases ICP, possibly leading to depression in recovery (slower or rougher recoveries).
Metabolism
Traditionally, it was thought that the inhalation anaesthetics were entirely taken up and eliminated by the lungs. However, of that portion of the anaesthetic taken up by the body's tissue, 25% of halothane is metabolized, compared to 3% of sevoflurane and virtually 0% for isoflurane or desflurane (Table 1). This becomes particularly important for neonatal animals and animals with liver or renal impairment.
In addition, metabolism of inhalation anaesthetics is an important concern from an occupational health aspect. Since metabolism of isoflurane, desflurane, and sevoflurane is minimal, there are less potential risks associated with chronic occupational health exposure. In veterinary practices with good waste anaesthetic gas management, occupational exposure still occurs at the time of disconnection, during recovery, and when servicing equipment, specially filling vaporisers!
Recovery Considerations
Speed of recovery from sevoflurane or desflurane is faster compared to halothane and to a lesser extent isoflurane. The speed of recovery from newer agents can be clinically observed - animals are more alert and owners notice this difference. These differences are possibly greater in geriatric, sick, or debilitated patients. Speed of recovery is also an important consideration for neonates (C-sections) and patients undergoing long anaesthesia.
The quality of recovery from anaesthesia is not necessarily related to the speed of recovery. Provision of analgesia positively influences the quality of recovery, but may prolong recovery. In large species such as horses this effect is clearly observed. Recent work in small animal anaesthesia suggests that hypothermia is an important factor affecting both duration and quality of recovery. Hypothermia occurs in 80% of anaesthetized small animals. There are a number areas where inhalation anaesthesia can influence the development of hypothermia including breathing circuits; and therefore, fresh O2 flows used, the level of cardio-pulmonary depression, and the return of skeletal muscle function to enable the animal to generate heat by shivering.
Occupational Safety
Generally less than 20% of the fresh gas supplied to a circle breathing system is used by the animal, (less than 5% for non-rebreathing systems). The excess oxygen and anaesthetic agent (waste anaesthetic gas or WAG) is vented via the "pop-off valve" to avoid pressure build up in the breathing system which would cause breath-holding, reduce blood flow through the lungs, and could result in death. Waste anaesthetic gas should be either ducted out of the room to the atmosphere or absorbed by activated charcoal. Another major source of work-place WAG pollution is from the animal during recovery from anaesthesia, when the anaesthetic agent absorbed into the body is exhaled into the recovery room. Therefore, recovery rooms should be larger, well-ventilated rooms.
Many studies of the short- and long-term health effects of exposure to WAG have examined incidence of developmental defects, spontaneous abortion, neurological dysfunction, and cancer. The evidence supporting toxicity from WAG exposure is only suggestive but some things are clear: inhaled anaesthetics can be metabolized to varying levels (Table 1) producing fluoride ions that can alter cellular biochemical function; newer agents have minimal metabolism; chronic nitrous oxide exposure can cause hepatic and neurological dysfunction; and there is an increased incidence of spontaneous abortion in pregnant women working in the anaesthesia environment, although this may be caused by other environmental factors. For these reasons, there are occupational safety guidelines outlining the acceptable levels of WAG exposure, which should be minimised in the work environment.
Environmental Pollution
All the inhalation anaesthetic agents used eventually end up in the atmosphere. Waste anaesthetic gas bound to charcoal deposited in a land-fill is vaporized with heat and sunlight exposure. Inhalation agents have a 10 to 30 year life in the atmosphere and are ozone depleting. Nitrous oxide is a green-house gas. Simply reducing oxygen fresh gas flows to reasonable levels (30 ml/kg/min for circle breathing systems), reducing usage of high flow non-rebreathing circuits (use 200 ml/kg/min or higher fresh gas flows), and eliminating use of nitrous oxide could reduce atmospheric pollution by up to 90%. Newer technology will enable animals as small as 2 kg to be anaesthetized using circle breathing systems. This will be discussed in the lecture on anaesthesia breathing circuits for practice (Circuits for Inhalation Anaesthesia).
Cost of Inhalation Anaesthesia
Inhalation anaesthesia cost is based on the cost of the agent itself; the fresh gas flow rate (oxygen ± nitrous oxide), which is dependent on the type of breathing circuit and size of the animal; and the vaporizer setting which is affected by the level of painful stimulation and other parenteral analgesics and anaesthetics administered. Other costs not considered in the table below include the cost of CO2 absorbent, oxygen, charcoal, cost/depreciation of equipment, and service of the machine or vaporizer.
Table 2
Table 3. Cost of inhalation anaesthetic agent
If you are looking for more details, kindly visit Digital x Ray Machine Veterinary.
47
0
0
Comments
All Comments (0)