Multiparameter Patient Monitoring in Veterinary Practice: What to Prioritise

ECG, SpO2, NIBP, capnography, temperature — not every monitor provides all five. Here's how to match monitoring capability to your clinical workload.

A veterinary patient monitor is one of the most visible pieces of capital equipment in a procedure room — and one of the most misunderstood. Not all monitors are equal, and the parameter set that suits a high-volume surgery practice is very different from what a general-practice clinic needs for elective anaesthesia monitoring.

The five core parameters

1. ECG (electrocardiography)

Continuous lead-II ECG is the baseline for detecting dysrhythmia during anaesthesia. Most veterinary patient monitors display at least a three-lead ECG trace. For cardiology consult or detailed rhythm analysis, a six-lead or twelve-lead capability becomes relevant — but this is rarely required at general-practice level.

2. SpO₂ (pulse oximetry)

Non-invasive, real-time oxygen saturation is the most commonly used parameter during routine anaesthesia. Clip probes attach to the tongue, digits, vulva or prepuce. Rectal probes are available for cases where standard sites are inaccessible. Target SpO₂ ≥95% during maintenance.

3. NIBP (non-invasive blood pressure)

Oscillometric cuffs on the antebrachium or tibia provide blood pressure readings every 3–5 minutes. Cuff size is critical — the cuff width should be approximately 40% of the limb circumference. An undersized cuff gives falsely elevated readings; an oversized cuff gives falsely low readings. Mean arterial pressure below 60 mmHg requires intervention.

4. Capnography (end-tidal CO₂)

End-tidal CO₂ (EtCO₂) is the single most useful continuous ventilation parameter available during anaesthesia. Target range is 35–45 mmHg. A rising trend suggests hypoventilation or inadequate fresh-gas flow; a sudden drop indicates airway disconnection or cardiovascular collapse. Sidestream capnography adapters fit standard endotracheal tubes without modification.

5. Temperature

Rectal or oesophageal temperature probe. Hypothermia during anaesthesia is the norm in small patients unless active warming is used from induction. Record every 15 minutes — not just at recovery.

Monitor tiers and what they typically include

Tier Typical parameters Best for
Entry ECG + SpO₂ + NIBP Low-volume elective anaesthesia
Mid-range ECG + SpO₂ + NIBP + EtCO₂ + Temp General practice, mixed surgical load
Advanced Above + invasive BP + agent concentration Referral, critical care, high-risk patients

One monitor or two procedure rooms?

If you run two procedure rooms simultaneously, two mid-range monitors almost always deliver more value than one advanced unit. Critical cases requiring invasive pressure monitoring are the exception in general practice — not the rule.

LumaVet stocks the IWA-HM series mid-range multiparameter monitors and the IWA-HM200/310/320 for higher-acuity environments. Compare specifications and speak to our team about the right tier for your surgical schedule.

Looking for veterinary equipment in Thailand? Browse our full lineup at lumavet.com or contact our team at sales@lumavet.com.

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