Glasgow Composite Pain Scale (dogs), FMPI/UNESP-Botucatu (cats), Colorado State pain scales, multimodal analgesia ladder, species-specific pain indicators, opioid/NSAID protocols with dosing.
Validated, species-specific pain assessment tools with interpretation guidance. Includes acute and chronic pain scales, multimodal analgesic protocols, and species-specific pain manifestations (especially feline pain hiding).
Scoring: Observer-rated scale; 0-26 points (higher = more pain); sections for behavior, posture, consciousness, physiologic values
| Domain | 0 Points | 1 Point | 2 Points | 3+ Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vocalization | Silent |
| Crying/groaning |
| Howling |
| Constant vocalization |
| Body Tension | Relaxed | Slightly tense | Moderate tension | Rigid/severe tension |
| Posture | Normal | Slightly abnormal | Moderately abnormal | Severely abnormal (hunched, stretched) |
| Consciousness | Normal | Drowsy | Depressed | Unresponsive |
| Appetite | Eating normally | Reduced intake | Not eating | Vomiting/retching |
| Responsiveness | Normal behavior | Slightly subdued | Withdrawn | Unresponsive/hostile |
Interpretation: 0-4 = minimal pain; 5-13 = mild-moderate pain; 14-26 = severe pain Trending: More important than absolute score; assess pre-treatment and post-analgesic to evaluate efficacy
FMPI (6 items scored 0-3): Lameness, reluctance to move, pain on palpation, posture abnormalities, activity level, dynamic gait changes
FMPI Behavioral Indicators of Pain:
UNESP-Botucatu (Alternative feline scale): Behavioral components (posture, activity, lameness) + physiologic (appetite, autonomic signs); used primarily in research settings
Acute Pain Categories:
Chronic Pain: Similar assessment but includes behavioral/activity changes (depression, reduced movement, sleep disturbance)
NSAIDs (first-line for inflammatory pain):
Opioids (acute severe pain):
Critical: Absence of vocalization in cats does NOT = absence of pain; behavioral and gait assessment essential
Concurrent Use: NSAIDs + opioids acceptable (multimodal); reduces required opioid dose, lowers GI ulceration risk Corticosteroid Washout: Avoid NSAIDs <1 week after systemic corticosteroid discontinuation (ulceration risk) Renal Monitoring: Baseline + 7-14 days into NSAID therapy (assess creatinine, BUN, urine specific gravity); especially critical in geriatric patients, dehydrated animals, or those with pre-existing renal disease Hepatic Monitoring: Baseline liver enzymes if prolonged NSAID use (>2 weeks) in at-risk patients