Cardiopulmonary and acid-base variables recorded during: long-term balanced anesthesia lasting between 12.5 and 16.9 h were evaluated retrospectively in 15 healthy foxhounds that underwent experimental bulla osteotomy with implantation of hearing aids. After premedication with propionylpromazine (0.11 +/- 0.02 mg/kg of body weight) and L-methadone (0.71 +/- 0.06 mg/kg) intravenously (i.v.) and induction with pentobarbital sodium (6.02 +/- 0.83 mg/kg i.v.), anesthesia was maintained with halothane (end-tidal concentration; ETHAL: 0.4 to 1.5%) in nitrous oxide (2 L/min) and oxygen (1 L/min). Because of positional changes from sternal to right lateral recumbency after presurgical brain stem electric response audiometry and differences in duration of surgery, data obtained between 4 (baseline) and 14 h after induction of anesthesia were analyzed. Arterial (Pao(2)) and alveolar (PAo(2),) O-2, tensions, arterial-to-alveolar O-2, tension ratio (Pao(2)/PAo(2),), and arterial O-2, content (Cao(2)) remained relatively stable throughout anesthesia. Arterial carbon dioxide tension (Paco(2)) was significantly increased above baseline (39, 33 to 46 mm Hg [median, range]) between 7 (39.8, 36.5 to 48.9 mm Hg) and 9 (42, 37.5 to 49.5 mm Hg) h after induction. Because changes in Paco(2) were accompanied by significant increases in body temperature from baseline (36.3, 34.6 to 37.4 degrees C) between 8 (37.1, 35 to 38 degrees C) and 11 (37.6, 35.3 to 38.1 degrees C) h after anesthesia induction as well as by slight increases in arterial blood pressure, the Paco(2), increase may have been caused by increase in metabolic CO2 production and enhanced drainage of CO2 from the tissues into systemic circulation. Furthermore, mild metabolic acidosis (pHa: 7.31, 7.26 to 7.38; HCO3-: 18.9, 16.7 to 21.8 mEq/L; base deficit [BD]: -6.3, -8.5 to -3.4 mEq/L) already existed at 4 h after induction and was related in part to tissue hypoperfusion. Small increases in pHa during the course of anesthesia mere accompanied by significant increases in HCO3- concentration and significant decreases in ED between 5 and 10 h after induction. Minor circumscribed swelling of the dependent triceps or masseter muscle was noticed on the first postoperative day in two dogs, and marked tissue swelling with hematoma formation at the medial side of one hind limb was noticed in a third dog. All dogs recovered completely and were submitted to follow-up studies. The anesthetic protocol and extent of monitoring used were adequate to provide safe long-term anesthesia for an experimental surgical procedure with a 100% survival rate and uneventful recovery in most of the dogs.