Comparison of Different Ventilatory Modalities and Inspired Oxygen Fractions in the Common Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus): A Randomized Clinical Trial

Autores

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5380/avs.v30i2.99093

Resumo

Abstract: This randomized clinical trial aimed to evaluate the effects of two inspired oxygen fractions (FiO₂: 40% and 60%) combined with different ventilatory modalities—spontaneous ventilation (SV, T0), volume-controlled ventilation (VCV, T1), and pressure-controlled ventilation (PCV, T2)—on cardiopulmonary and metabolic parameters in anesthetized rabbits. Sixteen healthy male New Zealand White rabbits were randomly assigned to two groups (G0.4 and G0.6). Animals were premedicated with ketamine (15 mg/kg), midazolam (2 mg/kg), and morphine (2 mg/kg), and general anesthesia was induced via face mask with isoflurane at 4.0%, diluted in oxygen at either 40% or 60%, according to group allocation. Physiological variables, blood gas analyses, and indirect calorimetry data were collected at multiple time points. Regarding blood gas variables, arterial oxygen partial pressure (PaO₂) increased progressively with higher inspired oxygen fractions, showing statistically significant differences between groups at T0, T1, and T2 (p =0.003, 0.001, and 0.001, respectively), while oxygenation indices remained within clinically acceptable ranges. Controlled ventilation was associated with improved oxygenation efficiency in both FiO₂ groups. Oxygen consumption (VO₂) and carbon dioxide production (VCO₂) progressively declined throughout anesthesia, whereas the respiratory quotient (RQ) range of approximately 0.8-0.9, indicating reduced metabolic demand and preserved substrate utilization. No clinically relevant differences were observed in heart rate, mean arterial pressure, or arterial carbon dioxide pressure (PaCO₂) between groups. These findings indicate that both 40% and 60% FiO₂ are safe and effective when combined with appropriate ventilatory strategies in healthy anesthetized rabbits, supporting individualized oxygen titration based on ventilation mode and physiological monitoring.

Biografia do Autor

Aline Bertolini de Lauro, UDESC

Médica Veterinária Autônoma, Lages, Santa Catarina, Brasil

Gilberto Serighelli Júnior, UFPR-Curitiba

Gilberto Serighelli Júnior Médico Veterinário, Mestre pela Universidade do Estado de Santa Catariana (UDESC) e Doutorando em Ciências Veterinárias pela Universidade Federal do Paraná (UFPR). Atua nas áreas de Anestesiologia Veterinária, Clínica e Cirurgia de Pequenos e Grandes Animais, com ênfase em anestesia locorregional, técnicas guiadas por ultrassom e farmacologia aplicada à anestesia. Autor de publicações em periódicos nacionais e internacionais na área de anestesiologia veterinária, participa de projetos de pesquisa multicêntricos e colabora com instituições de ensino e pesquisa em diferentes estados do Brasil.

Vanessa Regina Olszewski, Federal University of Paraná

Veterinary Sciences Graduate Program, Department of Veterinary Medicine, Federal University of Paraná, Curitiba, Brazil, State of Paraná, Brazil. ORCID:0000-0002-0979-7939; ORCID:0000-0003-2035-880.

Felipe Comassetto, UDESC

Professor, Dr., Department of Veterinary Medicine, Center for Agro-Veterinary Sciences (CAV), Santa Catarina State University (UDESC), Lages, State of Santa Catarina, Brazil

Nilson Oleskovicz, UDESC

Professor, Dr., Department of Veterinary Medicine, Center for Agro-Veterinary Sciences (CAV), Santa Catarina State University (UDESC), Lages, State of Santa Catarina, Brazil

Publicado

2025-06-24

Como Citar

Bertolini de Lauro, A., Serighelli Júnior, G., Regina Olszewski, V., Comassetto, F., & Oleskovicz, N. (2025). Comparison of Different Ventilatory Modalities and Inspired Oxygen Fractions in the Common Rabbit (Oryctolagus cuniculus): A Randomized Clinical Trial. Archives of Veterinary Science, 30(2). https://doi.org/10.5380/avs.v30i2.99093