J Am Assoc Lab Anim
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J Am Assoc Lab Anim · Jan 2013
Randomized Controlled TrialAssessment of postoperative analgesia after application of ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia for surgery in a swine femoral fracture model.
Management of pain in research swine used for studies involving painful procedures is a considerable challenge. Here we assessed whether a regional anesthesia method is effective for pain control of hindlimb injuries in pigs used for research in bone fracture healing. For this randomized controlled study, we administered regional anesthesia before an experimental femoral injury was produced. ⋯ Treatment pigs had lower subjective pain scores than did control animals. Control pigs had a longer time to first feed consumption and required additional analgesia earlier in the postoperative period than did treatment pigs. Ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia is a viable and effective adjunct to systemic analgesics for providing pain control in swine with experimental femoral fractures.
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J Am Assoc Lab Anim · Nov 2012
Randomized Controlled TrialA therapeutic dose of ketoprofen causes acute gastrointestinal bleeding, erosions, and ulcers in rats.
Perioperative treatment of several rats in our facility with ketoprofen (5 mg/kg SC) resulted in blood loss, peritonitis, and death within a day to a little more than a week after surgery that was not related to the gastrointestinal tract. Published reports have established the 5-mg/kg dose as safe and effective for rats. Because ketoprofen is a nonselective nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug that can damage the gastrointestinal tract, the putative diagnosis for these morbidities and mortalities was gastrointestinal toxicity caused by ketoprofen (5 mg/kg). ⋯ Our results showed marked gastrointestinal bleeding, erosions, and small intestinal ulcers in the ketoprofen-treated rats and minimal damages in the saline-treated group. The combination of ketoprofen and anesthesia resulted in worse clinical signs than did ketoprofen alone. We conclude that a single 5-mg/kg dose of ketoprofen causes acute mucosal damage to the rat small intestine.
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J Am Assoc Lab Anim · May 2012
Randomized Controlled TrialEffects of buprenorphine on a cecal ligation and puncture model in C57BL/6 mice.
Sepsis research relies heavily on animal models. One of the most frequently used models, cecal ligation and puncture (CLP), involves surgery, and animal use committees may require the use of analgesics after CLP. However, some analgesics are immunomodulatory and may affect research outcomes. ⋯ In female and male C57BL/6 mice, buprenorphine treatment resulted in few differences in inflammatory parameters, although peripheral neutrophil counts were decreased transiently in male mice. The findings suggest that the effects of buprenorphine on sepsis models in C57BL/6 mice may be sex-specific. Consequently the use of analgesics must be assessed on a study-by-study basis, and investigators should define analgesic regimens when publishing sepsis studies.
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J Am Assoc Lab Anim · Mar 2012
Randomized Controlled TrialCombining sevoflurane anesthesia with fentanyl-midazolam or s-ketamine in laboratory mice.
Laboratory mice typically are anesthetized by either inhalation of volatile anesthetics or injection of drugs. Here we compared the acute and postanesthetic effects of combining both methods with standard inhalant monoanesthesia using sevoflurane in mice. After injection of fentanyl-midazolam or S-ketamine as premedication, a standard 50-min anesthesia was conducted by using sevoflurane. ⋯ Postanesthetic telemetric measurements showed unchanged locomotor activity but elevated heart rate and core body temperature at 12 h; these changes were most prominent during sevoflurane monoanesthesia and least pronounced or absent during fentanyl-midazolam-sevoflurane. In conclusion, combining injectable and inhalant anesthetics in mice can be advantageous compared with inhalation monoanesthesia at induction and postanesthetically. However, adverse physiologic side effects during anesthesia can be exacerbated by premedications, requiring careful selection of drugs and dosages.
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J Am Assoc Lab Anim · Jul 2011
Randomized Controlled TrialEffects of multimodal analgesia on the success of mouse embryo transfer surgery.
Multimodal analgesia is promoted as the best practice pain management for invasive animal research procedures. Universal acceptance and incorporation of multimodal analgesia requires assessing potential effects on study outcome. The focus of this study was to assess effects on embryo survival after multimodal analgesia comprising an opioid and nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug (NSAID) compared with opioid-only analgesia during embryo transfer procedures in transgenic mouse production. ⋯ A total of 99 surgical sets were analyzed, comprising 199 Crl:CD1 female mice and their 996 offspring. Neither yield (pups weaned per embryo implanted in the surgical set) nor birth rate (average number of pups weaned per dam in the set) differed significantly between the CB and VB conditions. Multimodal opioid-NSAID analgesia appears to have no significant positive or negative effect on the success of producing novel lines of transgenic mice by blastocyst transfer.