mobic and Femoral-Fractures

mobic has been researched along with Femoral-Fractures* in 3 studies

Trials

1 trial(s) available for mobic and Femoral-Fractures

ArticleYear
Analgesic effects of meloxicam administration on postoperative orthopedic pain in domestic pigeons (Columba livia).
    American journal of veterinary research, 2012, Volume: 73, Issue:3

    To assess the analgesic effects of 2 doses of meloxicam on the degree of postoperative orthopedic pain in pigeons.. 21 domestic pigeons (Columba livia).. In each bird, a standardized osteotomy of 1 femur was performed and the fracture was immobilized with an intramedullary pin. Birds were randomly allocated to receive saline (0.9% NaCl) solution (control) or meloxicam (0.5 mg/kg [low dose] or 2.0 mg/kg [high dose]). The first treatment was administered i.m. after surgery was completed. Subsequent treatments were administered p.o. every 12 hours for 9 days. Degree of postoperative pain was assessed for the first 4 days after surgery by use of 3 methods: an electronic perch for assessment of weight-bearing load differential of the pelvic limbs, 4 pain scales, and analysis of video-recorded partial ethograms for bird activity and posture.. No significant differences were observed between the control group and the low-dose meloxicam group in any tested variable. The high-dose meloxicam group had a greater degree of weight bearing on the affected limb from the second to the fourth postoperative day as well as lower pain scores for at least the first 2 postoperative days, compared with the other groups. Return to presurgical behavior was achieved faster in pigeons that received high-dose meloxicam than in the other groups. No adverse effects were observed.. Administration of meloxicam at 0.5 mg/kg appeared ineffective in minimizing postoperative orthopedic pain in pigeons, but the 2.0 mg/kg dose provided quantifiable analgesia that appeared safe in this species in experimental conditions.

    Topics: Analgesia; Animals; Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal; Bird Diseases; Bone Diseases; Columbidae; Femoral Fractures; Male; Meloxicam; Motor Activity; Osteotomy; Pain Measurement; Pain, Postoperative; Thiazines; Thiazoles; Weight-Bearing

2012

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for mobic and Femoral-Fractures

ArticleYear
Intra-articular anaesthesia mitigates established pain in experimental osteoarthritis: a preliminary study of gait impulse redistribution as a biomarker of analgesia pharmacodynamics.
    Osteoarthritis and cartilage, 2013, Volume: 21, Issue:9

    Develop a sensitive, functional biomarker of persistent joint pain in a large animal model of experimental osteoarthritis. Evaluate Impulse Ratio as a measure of weight distribution among supporting limbs throughout the early natural history of osteoarthritis and with local anaesthesia and analgesia.. The distribution of weight bearing in the trot of 11 skeletally-mature dogs was analyzed before and after unilateral surgical intervention (cranial cruciate transection or distal femoral focal impact). The short-term effects of two analgesic treatments (intra-articular lidocaine and intra-dermal meloxicam) were then evaluated as an index of pain relief based on the redistribution of weight-bearing impulse between normal and injured limbs.. Impulse Ratio was able to resolve weight redistribution between limbs in both long-term (weekly for over 400 days) and short-term (15 min intervals) joint evaluations. Joint pain relief from lidocaine administration could be reliably tracked over its brief acting time course. Meloxicam administration resulted in ambiguous results, where average weight bearing in the injured limb did not increase, but the variability of limb use changed transiently and reversibly.. Joint function and the role of persistent joint pain in the development of osteoarthritis can be investigated effectively and efficiently in a large animal model through the use of Impulse Ratio. Impulse Ratio can be a functionally relevant and sensitive biomarker of locomotion-related joint pain.

    Topics: Anesthetics, Local; Animals; Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries; Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal; Arthralgia; Arthritis, Experimental; Biomarkers; Disease Models, Animal; Dogs; Female; Femoral Fractures; Gait; Injections, Intra-Articular; Injections, Intradermal; Lidocaine; Male; Meloxicam; Osteoarthritis, Knee; Pilot Projects; Thiazines; Thiazoles; Weight-Bearing

2013
Evaluation of a fracture pain model in domestic pigeons (Columba livia).
    American journal of veterinary research, 2012, Volume: 73, Issue:3

    To validate a model of postfracture pain in perching birds.. 21 adult domestic pigeons (Columba livia).. In each bird, a standardized osteotomy of 1 femur was performed and the fracture was immobilized with an intramedullary pin. Degree of postoperative pain was evaluated 6 times/d for 4 days by use of 3 methods: an electronic perch for assessment of weight-bearing load differential of the pelvic limbs, 4 numeric rating pain scales for assessment of pain (all of which involved the observer in the same room as the bird), and analysis of video-recorded (observer absent) partial ethograms for bird activity and posture. Measurements obtained were compared with data collected before the surgery to evaluate the ability of these methods to detect pain.. The weight-bearing load differential was a sensitive, specific, reliable, and indirect measure of fracture-associated pain in the model used. Two of 4 tested pain scales (fractured limb position and subjective evaluation of degree of pain) were sensitive and specific for detecting pain and were reliable in a research setting. Interobserver reliability of the 4 pain scales was excellent. Partial ethograms were sensitive for identifying pain-associated behavior in pigeons, particularly during the first 2 days after surgery.. The fracture pain model was reliable and reproducible and may be useful for experimental studies involving postsurgical pain in pigeons. Weight-bearing load differential was the most sensitive and specific means of determining degree of pain in pigeons during the first 4 days after hind limb fracture induction.

    Topics: Animals; Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal; Bird Diseases; Bone Diseases; Columbidae; Femoral Fractures; Male; Meloxicam; Osteotomy; Pain Measurement; Pain, Postoperative; Reproducibility of Results; Thiazines; Thiazoles; Weight-Bearing

2012