316 research outputs found
Standardisation of Environmental Enrichment for Laboratory Mice and Rats: Utilisation, Practicality and Variation in Experimental Results
Rats and mice are the most commonly used species as laboratory animal models of diseases in biomedical research. Environmental factors such as cage size, number of cage mates and cage structure such as environmental enrichment can affect the physiology and behavioural development of laboratory animals and their well-being throughout their lives. Therefore compromising the animals’ well-being due to inadequate environmental conditions would diminish the value of the research models. In order to improve laboratory animals’ well-being and promote the quality of animal based biomedical research, it is fundamentally important that the environment of the animals meets the animals’ species typical behavioural needs. Standardisation of environmental enrichment for laboratory rats and mice therefore should provide possibilities for the animals to engage in at least the essential behavioural needs such as social contact, nest building, exploring and foraging. There is a wide variety of environmental enrichment items commercially available for laboratory mice and rats. However, how these items are used by the animals, their practicality in the laboratory and whether these enrichments might lead to increased variation in experimental results have not been widely assessed. In this study, we implemented two standardised enrichment items (shelters, nesting materials) for rats and mice at different animal units. We instructed the animal care staff in monitoring the use of enrichment items by the animals by means of a daily score sheet system. The animal staff ’s viewpoint on practicality of the standardised enrichment program was assessed with a monthly score sheet survey. Also we assessed whether the enriched environment affected breeding results and contributed to an increase in variation of experimental data from several participating current studies. Our results show that the animals readily used the provided enrichment items. A slight increase in workload for the animal staff was reported. However, the overall judgement was mainly reported as good. Breeding results and variation in experimental data did not reveal differences as compared to data from previous housing and/or non enriched housing conditions. Overall, the results indicate that standard environmental enrichment that is species appropriate may enhance the animal’s well-being without undesirable side effects on the experimental outcome and daily working routine of the animal care staff.
A questionnaire-based inventory of the orbital puncture method in the Netherlands
To contribute to the assessment of the degree of discomfort in rodents as caused by orbital puncture, we made an inventory in the Netherlands on the basis of an inquiry. Orbital puncture is being performed in laboratory rodents more than 45000 times a year. Usually, ether is used as anaesthetic. In about two-third of the institutes where orbital puncture is being performed, complications are noted. In I to 5 % of the animals punctured blindness can occur. In more than half of the instituteswhere orbital puncture is being performed there are objections to this technique. Which are essentially of an emotional/ethical nature
Polyimide-ald-polyimide layers as hermetic encapsulant for implants
Several requirements exist for medical devices for long term implantation. Firstly, the foreign body reaction and/or inflammation occurring upon implantation should remain mild and short in time. Moreover, the device needs to be biocompatible during the total implantation duration, hence not causing reactions which decrease the patient’s health. Finally, the device needs to work properly and safe during the total period of implantation, not suffering from corrosion or chemical degradation. To meet these requirements, diffusion of body fluids into the package should be avoided as well as diffusion of toxic device materials into the body, hence a hermetic packaging method is an absolute necessity. Here, a flexible hermetic packaging is presented using alternating polyimide and atomic layer deposited (ALD) metal oxides. Good adhesion between the inorganic ALD layers and the polyimide is required to avoid the creation of lateral diffusion pads. To obtain this, surface modifications of both polyimide and ALD layers are optimized, as presented in this paper. The hermeticity is evaluated in terms of water vapor transmission rate measurements of the film stack
Orbital bleeding in rats while under diethylether anaesthesia does not influence telemetrically determined heart rate, body temperature, locomotor and eating activity when compared with anaesthesia alone
The question addressed was whether orbital bleeding in rats, while under diethylether anaesthesia, affects their locomotor activity, body core temperature, heart rate rhythm and eating pattern. Roman High Avoidance (RHA) and Roman Low Avoidance (RLA) rats were used to enhance generalization of the results. Orbital bleeding when the rats were under diethylether anaesthesia was compared with diethylether anaesthesia alone. To take into account any effects of handling, the rats were also subjected to sham anaesthesia. The RHA rats urinated more during anaesthesia, needed more time to recover from the anaesthesia and showed a greater endocrine stress response to diethylether anaesthesia when compared with the RLA rats. During anaesthesia, the RHA rats showed a greater fall of body temperature and bradycardia than did the RLA rats. Diethylether anaesthesia reduced locomotor activity in the RHA rats, but had no effect in the RLA rats. In neither RHA nor RLA rats did anaesthesia plus orbital puncture, versus anaesthesia alone, influence body temperature, heart rate rhythm, locomotor and eating activity. The lack of effect of orbital puncture occurred both in the short term (within 2 h) and long term (within 48 hours) and thus this study indicates that orbital puncture had, at least with respect to variables measured in the present study, no effect superimposed on that of diethylether anaesthesia
Long-term effects of husbandry procedures on stress-related parameters in male mice of two strains
In socially unstable groups of male laboratory mice, individuals may experience a chronic stress situation. Previous experiments have shown that the transfer of specific olfactory cues during cage cleaning, and the provision of nesting material decrease aggression and stress in group-housed male mice. In this study, the combined effect of these husbandry procedures were tested for their long-term effect on stress in groups of moderately aggressive (BALB/c) and severely aggressive (CD-1) male mice. The physiological and behavioural stress-related parameters used were body weight, food and water intake, spleen and thymus weight, adrenal tyrosine hydroxylase activity, urine corticosterone levels and behaviour in a cage emergence test. Long-term provision of nesting material and its transfer during cage cleaning was found to influence several stress-related physiological parameters. Mice housed in cages enriched with nesting material had lower urine corticosterone levels and heavier thymuses, and they consumed less food and water than standard-housed mice. Furthermore, marked differences were found between strains. CD-1 mice were less anxious in the cage emergence test, weighed more, ate and drank more, and had heavier thymuses but lighter spleens and lower corticosterone levels than BALB/c mice. We conclude that the long-term provision of nesting material, including the transfer of nesting material during cage cleaning, reduces stress and thereby enhances the welfare of laboratory mice.</p
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