Age alone is never a contraindication to general anesthesia in geriatric dogs and cats. The 2023 AAHA Senior Care Guidelines explicitly state that advanced age alone does not contraindicate general anesthesia, and that senior pets can safely undergo multiple anesthetic events when necessary.AAHA Clinical G…

What advanced age does confer is increased anesthetic risk through altered physiology, including changes in cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, hepatic, and neurological systems that modify drug responses and reduce the ability to mount a robust physiologic response to hypotension or hypothermia.AAHA Clinical G… A fairly high percentage of health abnormalities — including those that might prompt cancellation or modification of anesthesia — are identified during preanesthetic screening of geriatric dogs, which is why thorough evaluation matters.AAHA Clinical G…

The appropriate response to advanced age is risk mitigation, not refusal. Preoperative evaluation should include a physical examination, renal function assessment (creatinine), and cardiac function assessment (N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide), with imaging as indicated.AAHA Clinical G… Preprocedural IV fluids are appropriate in patients with compromised renal function where fasting or hospitalization anxiety may reduce water intake, and preoxygenation is recommended for patients with cardiovascular or pulmonary disease.AAHA Clinical G… Injectable anesthetic agents require careful dose selection in geriatric patients due to altered pharmacokinetics, decreased plasma protein binding, and decreased hepatic metabolism and renal excretion.AAHA Clinical G… Dose-sparing anesthesia using synergistically acting agents — partial IV anesthesia (PIVA) or total IV anesthesia (TIVA) with intubation and oxygen supplementation — supports improved hemodynamics in higher-risk patients.AAHA Clinical G…

The short answer: there is no age threshold at which anesthesia becomes contraindicated. The clinical question is always whether the underlying disease burden — not the age itself — justifies the risk.

Would you like to go through the specific drug and dosing adjustments recommended for geriatric patients under PIVA or TIVA protocols?

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AAHA Clinical Guidelines.
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AAHA Clinical Guidelines.
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