“…In fact, one of the objectives of veterinary medicine is to provide adequate analgesia to help the patient not feel pain, and to move, eat, and sleep without discomfort, particularly in the first hours after the operation [ 17 ]. The use of local anaesthetics, despite its benefits, can cause side effects, including allergic reactions, sedation, respiratory depression, convulsions, hyperexcitability, tissue irrigation, and coma [ 18 , 19 , 20 , 21 ]. In this study, which included 20 cats, no side effects, complications, or mortality occurred in any of the patients.…”