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Vet Tech Level · Saturday April 11, 2026 · Fundamentals

Fundamentals — Vital Signs -- TPR Assessment Protocols and Clinical Documentation

TPR assessment is one of the first skills every vet tech masters. Accurate vital sign measurement and documentation is the foundation of every patient encounter.

April 11, 2026
8 min read
Dogs & Cats
intermediate
Apr 11 2026

Why Accurate TPR Matters

As a vet tech or vet assistant, your TPR assessment is often the first clinical data the veterinarian receives about a patient. Inaccurate measurements lead to inaccurate clinical decisions. Your job is not just to take the numbers -- it is to take them correctly, interpret them in context, and document them precisely.

Temperature -- Clinical Protocol

Use a digital rectal thermometer lubricated with water-soluble lubricant. Insert 1-1.5 inches at a slight angle toward the rectal wall. Hold 60 seconds. Normal: Dogs/Cats: 100.5-102.5F | Rabbits: 101-104F | Birds (cloacal): 103-109F. Pyrexia above 103F -- notify veterinarian. Hyperthermia above 104F -- urgent, does NOT respond to antipyretics, requires active cooling. Hypothermia below 99F -- initiate warming protocol per clinic SOP.

Pulse -- Full Assessment Parameters

Primary site: femoral artery. Document ALL: Rate (60s for arrhythmias, 15s x 4 for regular), Rhythm (regular/regularly irregular/irregularly irregular), Quality (strong/normal/weak/absent), Synchrony (compare to auscultated heart rate -- pulse deficits require immediate notification). Normal: Large dogs 60-100 | Medium dogs 80-120 | Small dogs 100-160 | Cats 140-220 bpm.

Respiration -- Clinical Assessment

Observe from a distance before handling -- stress significantly alters rate. Count 60 seconds. Document: Rate, Rhythm, Depth, Effort, Character. Normal: Dogs 15-30/min | Cats 20-30/min. Red flags: Open-mouth breathing in cats (always abnormal), RR above 40/min at rest, paradoxical chest movement, cyanosis, orthopneic posture.

Mucous Membranes and CRT

Apply firm digital pressure to gingiva for 2 seconds, release, count to reperfusion. Normal: 1-2 seconds. Pink/moist/CRT under 2s = normal. Pale/CRT over 2s = reduced perfusion. Brick red/CRT under 1s = vasodilation/sepsis. Cyanotic = hypoxemia -- oxygen immediately. Icteric = hyperbilirubinemia. Tacky/dry = dehydration.

Documentation Standard

Every TPR must include: date/time, your initials, all parameters (T, P rate/rhythm/quality, R rate/effort/character, MM color, CRT), patient position and demeanor, any abnormalities and veterinarian notification time. Example: T: 102.1F, P: 88 bpm regular/strong, R: 18/min regular/normal effort, MM: pink/moist, CRT: 1.5s. Patient calm, sternal. -- J. Smith CVT 14:32

Clinical Pearl

Always auscultate the heart rate and compare it to the palpated pulse rate. A pulse deficit -- where heart rate exceeds pulse rate -- indicates some contractions are not generating sufficient stroke volume. This is a significant finding requiring immediate veterinarian notification.

Fundamentals intermediate 🐕 Dogs 🐈 Cats 🎓 Vet Tech
Sources & Further Reading
Merck Veterinary Manual -- Physical Examination: Vital Signs. merckvetmanual.com
AVMA -- Pet Owner Resources. avma.org
VCA Animal Hospitals -- How to Take Your Pet's Vital Signs. vcahospitals.com
Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine. vet.cornell.edu
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April 11, 2026 — Vet Tech Level Fundamentals
April 12, 2026 — Body Condition Scoring
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Go Back to Basics — Pet Owner Level
How to Check Your Pet's Health at Home
Want to share this with a pet owner friend? The Pet Owner level covers the same topic in plain English -- perfect for anyone with dogs or cats.
Read Pet Owner Level
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Go Even Deeper — Pre-Vet Level
Hemodynamic Physiology and Clinical Interpretation
Pre-vet students go even deeper -- learning the hemodynamic physiology behind every vital sign change and what it tells us about cardiovascular and respiratory function at a systems level.
Read Pre-Vet Level
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