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AAEP Virtual Wednesday Round Table: Standing Sedation Techniques for Field Surgery

AAEP Virtual Wednesday Round Table: Standing Sedation Techniques for Field Surgery

Recorded On: 03/12/2025

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Open to view video.  |  91 minutes
Open to view video.  |  91 minutes March 12, 2025. Most standing procedures are of short duration with local anesthesia included. However, the increasing prevalence of more extensive procedures being performed in the field with the horse standing requires amplifying the sedative and analgesic effects of basic sedation protocols to produce maximal chemical restraint. Join board-certified veterinary anesthesiologists Dr. John A.E. Hubbell & Dr. Rachel Reed for a discussion and Q&A concerning sedative agents and techniques used for standing chemical restraint of horses.

March 12, 2025. Most standing procedures are of short duration with local anesthesia included. However, the increasing prevalence of more extensive procedures being performed in the field with the horse standing requires amplifying the sedative and analgesic effects of basic sedation protocols to produce maximal chemical restraint. 

Join board-certified veterinary anesthesiologists Dr. John A.E. Hubbell & Dr. Rachel Reed for a discussion and Q&A concerning sedative agents and techniques used for standing chemical restraint of horses.

No RACE-accredited CE


John Hubbell

Dr. Hubbell is chief of anesthesiology at Rood & Riddle Equine Hospital in Lexington, Ky., and professor emeritus of veterinary clinical sciences at The Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine. Dr. Hubbell received his veterinary degree in 1977 from Ohio State, where he served on faculty from 1982–2015 until joining Rood & Riddle. Dr. Hubbell delivered the AAEP’s 2020 Milne Lecture and is co-author of Handbook of Veterinary Anesthesia and of Equine Anesthesia: Monitoring and Emergency Therapy.

Rachel Reed

Dr. Reed is an associate professor of anesthesia at the University of Georgia College of Veterinary Medicine. She received her veterinary degree from North Carolina State University in 2011. Dr. Reed later completed a residency in anesthesia and analgesia at the University of Tennessee before joining the University of Georgia faculty in 2016. She is co-editor of Manual of Equine Anesthesia and Analgesia, Second Edition and of Equine Anesthesia and Pain Management.