Effect of local anaesthesia and/or analgesia on pain responses induced by piglet castration

BackgroundSurgical castration in male piglets is painful and methods that reduce this pain are requested. This study evaluated the effect of local anaesthesia and analgesia on vocal, physiological and behavioural responses during and after castration. A second purpose was to evaluate if herdsmen can effectively administer anaesthesia.MethodsFour male piglets in each of 141 litters in five herds were randomly assigned to one of four treatments: castration without local anaesthesia or analgesia (C, controls), analgesia (M, meloxicam), local anaesthesia (L, lidocaine), or both local anaesthesia and analgesia (LM). Lidocaine (L, LM) was injected at least three minutes before castration and meloxicam (M, LM) was injected after castration. During castration, vocalisation was measured and resistance movements judged. Behaviour observations were carried out on the castration day and the following day. The day after castration, castration wounds were ranked, ear and skin temperature was measured, and blood samples were collected for analysis of acute phase protein Serum Amyloid A concentration (SAA). Piglets were weighed on the castration day and at three weeks of age. Sickness treatments and mortality were recorded until three weeks of age.ResultsPiglets castrated with lidocaine produced calls with lower intensity (p < 0.001) and less resistance movements (p < 0.001) during castration. Piglets that were given meloxicam displayed less pain-related behaviour (huddled up, spasms, rump-scratching, stiffness and prostrated) on both the castration day (p = 0.06, n.s.) and the following day (p = 0.02). Controls had less swollen wounds compared to piglets assigned to treatments M, L and LM (p < 0.001). The proportion of piglets with high SAA concentration (over threshold values 200, 400 mg/l) was higher (p = 0.005; p = 0.05) for C + L compared to M + LM. Ear temperature was higher (p < 0.01) for controls compared to L and LM. There were no significant treatment effects for skin temperature, weight gain, sickness treatments or mortality.ConclusionsThe study concludes that lidocaine reduced pain during castration and that meloxicam reduced pain after castration. The study also concludes that the herdsmen were able to administer local anaesthesia effectively.

[1]  Olav Sand,et al.  Physiology of Domestic Animals , 2007 .

[2]  Armelle Prunier,et al.  A review of the welfare consequences of surgical castration in piglets and the evaluation of non-surgical methods , 2006, Animal Welfare.

[3]  T. Martinussen,et al.  Acute phase response to surgery of varying intensity in horses: a preliminary study. , 2009, Veterinary surgery : VS.

[4]  J. M. Hellman,et al.  The development of pain in young pigs associated with castration and attempts to prevent castration-induced behavioral changes. , 1993, Journal of animal science.

[5]  G. C. Whittow Regulation of Body Temperature , 1976 .

[6]  E. von Borell,et al.  [Behavior of piglets during castration with and without local anesthesia]. , 1999, DTW. Deutsche tierarztliche Wochenschrift.

[7]  Shachar Lovett,et al.  Preface , 2012, COLT.

[8]  H. A. Haga,et al.  Distribution of radioactive lidocaine injected into the testes in piglets. , 2005, Journal of veterinary pharmacology and therapeutics.

[9]  M. Heinonen,et al.  Tail biting induces a strong acute phase response and tail-end inflammation in finishing pigs. , 2010, Veterinary journal.

[10]  N. Andrews,et al.  ASH 50th Anniversary Reviews (34 articles) , 2022 .

[11]  D. Weary,et al.  Vocal response to pain in piglets , 1998 .

[12]  Armelle Prunier,et al.  Assessment of pain induced by castration in piglets: behavioral and physiological responses over the subsequent 5 days , 2003 .

[13]  S Beggs,et al.  Book Review: The Neurobiology of Pain: Developmental Aspects , 2001, The Neuroscientist : a review journal bringing neurobiology, neurology and psychiatry.

[14]  J. Deshazer,et al.  Vocalization and physiological response of pigs during castration with or without a local anesthetic. , 1995, Journal of animal science.

[15]  D. Weary,et al.  Vocal responses of piglets to castration: identifying procedural sources of pain. , 2000, Applied animal behaviour science.

[16]  F. Wemelsfelder,et al.  Behaviour as a possible indicator for pain in piglets , 1985 .

[17]  B. Phillips,et al.  Pain assessment. , 1993, Nursing RSA = Verpleging RSA.

[18]  E. Borell,et al.  Analysis of pain-related vocalization in young pigs , 2003 .

[19]  P. Eckersall,et al.  Characterisation of the pig acute phase protein response to road transport. , 2007, Veterinary journal.

[20]  Armelle Prunier,et al.  Pre-emptive meloxicam for postoperative analgesia in piglets undergoing surgical castration. , 2010, Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia.

[21]  Gerald Reiner,et al.  Pain and discomfort in male piglets during surgical castration with and without local anaesthesia as determined by vocalisation and defence behaviour , 2009 .

[22]  “WELFARE ASPECTS OF THE CASTRATION OF PIGLETS” Scientific Report of the Scientific Panel for Animal Health and Welfare on a request from the Commission related to welfare aspects of the castration of Piglets , 2004 .

[23]  J. Nielsen,et al.  Application of acute phase protein measurements in veterinary clinical chemistry. , 2004, Veterinary research.

[24]  H. Spoolder,et al.  Verdoofd castreren in de varkenshouderij = Castration under anaesthesia and/or analgesia in commercial pig production , 2007 .

[25]  Lotta Rydhmer,et al.  Aggressive and sexual behaviour of growing and finishing pigs reared in groups, without castration , 2006 .

[26]  C. Hultén,et al.  A non-competitive chemiluminescence enzyme immunoassay for the equine acute phase protein serum amyloid A (SAA) -- a clinically useful inflammatory marker in the horse. , 1999, Veterinary immunology and immunopathology.

[27]  H. A. Haga,et al.  Castration of piglets: the analgesic effects of intratesticular and intrafunicular lidocaine injection. , 2005, Veterinary anaesthesia and analgesia.

[28]  D. Weary,et al.  Behavioural responses of piglets to castration: the effect of piglet age. , 2001, Applied animal behaviour science.

[29]  P. Flecknell,et al.  Pain management in animals. , 2000 .

[30]  P. B. Lynch,et al.  Effect of surgical castration on the behavioural and acute phase responses of 5-day-old piglets , 2008 .