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Declaws Should Be Performed Humanely

By Phil Zeltzman, DVM, Dipl. ACVS

We have all heard some of the reasons onychectomy is evil:

  • It as a barbaric as cutting people’s knuckles off. Cats end up miserably painful and unable to walk and jump for the rest of their lives..
  • No reasonable cat would willingly choose to have the procedure done..
  • Vets have only gone to school for, like, 20 years or so, and are obviously incapable of making intelligent decisions. Plus, they’re in it for the money. Therefore, politicians, lobbyists and activists should make sound decisions for them.

How to perform a ring block

A ring block is an easy procedure that can provide excellent preoperative pain relief to the distal front limb.

“It is ideal to use a 50/50 mixture of two local anesthetics: a short-acting one such as 2 percent lidocaine or 2 percent mepivacaine and a longer-acting drug such as 0.5 percent bupivacaine,” Dr. Kurt Grimm says.

“It often takes 15 to 30 minutes for bupivacaine to have a complete anesthetic effect. If you use bupivacaine alone, surgery will likely start before the block is effective,” he says. “By combining both drugs, you get rapid onset and longer duration of action.”

It is important to make sure the drugs do not contain epinephrine.

A total of 0.1 to 0.3 ml of the mixture can be injected using a 22 G needle at each site.

The goal is to block distal branches of the radial, ulnar and median nerves.*

  • Radial nerve branches can be palpated on the dorso-medial of the proximal carpus.
  • Ulnar nerve branches are palpable proximally and laterally to the accessory carpal bone.
  • Median nerve branches can be palpated proximally to the median carpal foot pad (digit 1).

Alternatively and more simply, a four-point nerve block can be performed.

To perform either block, the hair is clipped around the carpus and the skin is scrubbed thoroughly.

It is important to note that local anesthesia may cause vasodilatation and therefore increased bleeding, which should, however, be short-lived.

Overall, the procedure can easily be included in an anesthetic protocol for a declaw procedure.

* Reference: RT Skarda and WJ Tranquilli  “Local and regional anesthetic and analgesic techniques: cats.” In: WJ Tranquilli, JC Thurmon and KA Grimm.  Lumb and Jones’ Veterinary Anesthesia and Analgesia, 4th edition. Blackwell Publishing, 2007.

Some of the grounds to allow vets to do declaws include:

  • It is a surgical procedure, performed under general anesthesia, which should only be offered after discussing the pros and cons with the owner--just like any other surgery. 
  • Declawing should not be a convenience or an automatic procedure. It should be chosen as a last resort, when other recognized, established options (regular nail trimming, training, glued-on plastic nail caps, etc.) have failed.
  • Scratching babies, kids, grandmas, chemo patients, AIDS patients and furniture is not always easy to prevent. In selected cases, declawing may then be an alternative to relinquishment or euthanasia.
  • Forbidding vets to perform declaws may lead to “backyard declaws,” with or without anesthesia. And with or without pain relief.

Of course, there are other reasons. But one small detail always seems to be missing from this debate: appropriate pain management.

We perform surgeries that are far more traumatic and painful that onychectomies.  If we can repair bilateral radius/ulna fractures with plates and screws, amputate a leg, perform spinal surgery or do a combined thoracotomy and laparotomy, and send a comfortable (and ambulatory) kitty home after one or a few days in the hospital, then surely we should be able to make a declaw a humane procedure.

That’s the missing detail nobody seems to talk about.

Here is one anesthetic protocol that has been shown to provide excellent analgesia. It is borrowed from colleagues--general practitioners--who have used it successfully for years.

  1. Application of a 12.5 microgram fentanyl “pain patch” the night before. The patch kicks in after 12-24 hours.  The owner could be given the option of overnight hospitalization or bringing the cat back the next day.
  2. Before surgery, local anesthesia is provided in the form of a “ring block”
  3. Before surgery, an injectable nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) such as meloxicam (for example at 0.15 mg/kg) is given.
  4. Before surgery, injectable morphine is administered.
  5. After surgery, the injectable NSAID is continued once daily and the morphine every 6-8 hours or as needed.
  6. To go home, the NSAID is continued by mouth for five days. Just be aware that this is an off-label use, so your clients should be perfectly informed of the possible side-effects, including renal toxicity.
  7. The fentanyl patch can be removed three to five days after application.

Don’t like morphine? “You could use injectable and then oral buprenorphine,” explains Kurt Grimm, DVM, MS, Ph.D., a diplomate of the American College of Veterinary Anesthesiology and of the American College of Veterinary Clinical Pharmacology.

Dr. Grimm, anesthesiologist at Veterinary Specialist Services in Conifer, Colo., explains: “Some colleagues are hesitant to use a fentanyl patch with buprenorphine, but I think that the antagonistic clinical interactions between opioid agonists may have been over-extrapolated from in vitro data.

“The net analgesic effect in any individual depends on many factors such as the relative doses, timing of administration, and individual responses to opioid administration. What matters clinically is whether the patient appears comfortable without significant adverse drug effects.

“Alternatively, if the patch doesn’t seem to be effective or needs to be removed because of adverse effects such as sedation, dysphoria, anorexia, hyperthermia or urinary retention, you could consider oral tramadol, either in a tablet form or compounded into syrup (often 12.5 mg per cat three or four times daily),” he continues.

Dr. Grimm reminds us that every patient is different and that it is imperative to periodically assess the effectiveness of the analgesia protocol and to adjust it to meet individual needs, rather than to blindly follow a recipe.

Other recommendations include very strict confinement and wearing an Elizabethan collar for two weeks, as well as being home-bound for life.

Ultimately, whether declawing is a humane procedure is a personal decision.

However, improper analgesia is inhumane, period. We have made tremendous progress in pain management. There are journals, books, short courses, associations, symposia and a whole specialty college dedicated to that subject.  Let’s apply this knowledge to our patients!

The AVMA position statement confirms: “If onychectomy is performed, appropriate use of safe and effective anesthetic agents and the use of safe peri-operative analgesics for an appropriate length of time are imperative.”

You may be concerned that following the above protocol is cost prohibitive. 

First, the colleagues who use it would strongly disagree. Their clients are happy to provide such a high level of care once they are educated about what declawing entails and what the consequences are.

Second, if your clients can’t afford appropriate analgesia, then this debate is not at all about ethics or morality or being heartless.

Turns out, it may become a financial discussion.

Oh, I almost forgot. I don’t perform declaws. As a surgeon, I tend to do fancier procedures, also with appropriate analgesia. <HOME>

Dr. Phil Zeltzman is a small-animal board-certified surgeon at Valley Central Veterinary Referral Center in Whitehall, Pa. His website is www.DrPhilZeltzman.com.

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Declaws Should Be Performed Humanely

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Reader Comments
I have no problem performing declaws (front only) on cats that will be or are indoors only. I include pain management in the cost of the surgery, as I have worked in clinics where it was given as an "option" with additional cost. That is ridiculous. On kittens, I give an injection of rimadyl or metacam an hour before the procedure, and usually give some injectable torbugesic just before the cat wakes up. I have also found that being careful not to remove the pad with the digit, greatly reduces post-op pain. In adult cats, in addition to the NSAID injection I will often send them home with torbutrol tabs or liquid, or buprenex orally. I have never used tramadol in cats but would consider that as well if appropriate. I will not perform a declaw on an unaltered cat unless the spay/neuter is performed at the same time. When the owner says they "cant afford to do both" and choose the declaw, and to wait on the spay/neuter, I let them know that that is not in the best interest of the cat, and refuse to perform the declaw. I will also refuse to perform a declaw in cats over 5, unless the circumstances are unusual.
Kathy, Salt Lake City, UT
Posted: 1/6/2010 11:38:22 PM
I find that the people that have problems with declaws do not understand the anatomy of the cat nail. When I perform a declaw, I use a surgical blade and remove only P3. The weight bearing is on the pad, not on the claw. Approximately 3-4mm of bone is between P2 and the pad that is removed when declawing. P2 drops onto the pad and everything else is the same.

All my own cats have been declawed and act normally. They act like they are sharpening their claws and walk without pain.

Certainly a human with their P3 removed would have serious problems. Don't apply problems that humans would have onto cats that don't use P3 like we do.

I agree that pain management is essential with declaws and if the surgeon is competent the cat will do fine. As far as I'm concerned, anyone using a nail trimmer should stop.
Mark, Dallas, TX
Posted: 12/31/2009 3:45:51 PM
Wow! This is a great article that couldn't have come at a better time for me. Thank you so much for your sharing your insights. I have been hoping to implement a better pain management protocol for our declaw patients and this will definitely help me make the case to my bosses!
Christie, Elk Grove Village, IL
Posted: 12/30/2009 9:15:53 PM
In Europe declawning is illegal, and I do not suport it, for whatever reason the Americal clients demand it is inhumane and barbaric, looming large.
Minka, La Jolla, CA
Posted: 12/30/2009 8:44:30 PM
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