Influence of Comprehensive Pre-Anaesthetic Assessment on ASA Classification and Surgical Cancellations in Dogs and Cats: A Retrospective Observational Study
Author
Date
2025-07Permanent link
http://hdl.handle.net/11351/13844DOI
10.3390/vetsci12070612
ISSN
2306-7381
WOS
001535842600001
PMID
40711272
Abstract
Anaesthesia carries an inherent risk of morbidity and mortality in veterinary patients, yet the clinical impact of comprehensive pre-anaesthetic assessment (PAA) is insufficiently quantified. We retrospectively reviewed 350 PAAs including 267 dogs and 83 cats, performed at a small-animal teaching hospital in 2021. Signalment, history, physical examination findings, complementary diagnostics, initial ASA physical status (ASA-i), final ASA status after test review (ASA-f) and procedural outcomes were recorded. Complementary diagnostics—predominantly haematology, serum biochemistry, thoracic radiography, and electrocardiography—were requested in 82–86% of cases. ASA-f differed from ASA-i in 7.5% (11/306) of animals: +1 in 3.6%, +2 in 1.0%, −1 in 2.9%; no patient shifted by more than two classes. Fifty-seven planned procedures (16.2%) were cancelled following PAAs, chiefly abdominal (43.9%) and minor soft-tissue surgeries (31.6%). Internal-medicine abnormalities (47%) and cardiac findings (19%) were the leading causes; in 46% of cancellations, the trigger was an abnormal test result absent from the physical examination. Sixty-three percent of cancelled interventions were later completed after further evaluation or treatment. These data demonstrate that structured PAA substantially alters perioperative decision-making in small-animal practice and supports selective yet rigorous diagnostic test use to enhance patient safety and optimise theatre utilisation.
Keywords
Animal safety; Pre-anaesthetic assessment; Veterinary anaesthesiaBibliographic citation
Cañón Pérez A, Marti-Scharfhausen Sánchez MD, Sevilla Ureba A, Hernández Magaña EZ, Viscasillas Monteagudo J, Martínez Albiñana A, et al. Influence of Comprehensive Pre-Anaesthetic Assessment on ASA Classification and Surgical Cancellations in Dogs and Cats: A Retrospective Observational Study. Vet Sci. 2025 Jul;12(7):612.
Audience
Professionals
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- VHIR - Articles científics [1750]
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