Perla Ivette Velazquez-Delgado, E. Gutierrez-Blanco, J. Torres-Acosta, Carlos Alfredo Sandoval-Castro, Rafael Arturo Torres-Fajardo, Antonio Ortega-Pacheco
{"title":"TÉCNICA DE ABOMASOTOMÍA PARA LA EXTRACCIÓN DE Haemonchus contortus EN CABRAS VIVAS","authors":"Perla Ivette Velazquez-Delgado, E. Gutierrez-Blanco, J. Torres-Acosta, Carlos Alfredo Sandoval-Castro, Rafael Arturo Torres-Fajardo, Antonio Ortega-Pacheco","doi":"10.56369/tsaes.4985","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background: Goats are increasingly being used as surgical models in animal experiments. Some ruminant parasitological studies require collecting adult nematodes directly from the abomasum of donor animals. A methodology to collect those adult worms in vivo could avoid the unnecessary sacrifice of donor animals. Objective: To describe an abomasotomy technique to obtain adult Haemonchus contortus from live goats and evaluate the immediate post-surgical recovery time. Methodology: Nine worm-free adult goats were infected with 6000 H. contortus L3. The monospecific infection was confirmed on day 28 post-infection. The anesthetic procedure included fentanyl (10 μg * kg BW-1 load dose (LD) and 10 μg * kg BW-1 hour in constant-rate-infusion (CRI), lidocaine (2 mg * kg LD-1 and 50 μg * kg BW-1 minute CRI), ketamine (1.5 mg * kg-1 and 50 μg * kg BW-1 min CRI) and propofol (4 mg * kg LD-1 and 0.4 mg * kg BW-1 min CRI). The surgical protocol consisted of eight “surgical time-points”. Purposeful animal movement in response to surgical stimulation, or any changes in the autonomic response (> 20% from baseline values of HR and arterial blood pressure (SAP, MAP, and DAP)) were used as criteria to identify trans-surgical nociception. Post-surgical pain was evaluated once daily with the wound healing evaluation. Results: The surgical protocol lasted 1 h, allowing the recovery of adult H. contortus from live goats. The anesthetic protocol successfully controlled trans-surgical pain, with only two animals crossing the HR threshold (>20%) from T2 to T6. Post-surgical recovery (“time to extubation” and “time to standing”) was achieved before 1 h, while animals consumed water after only 4 h post-surgery. Goats did not require rescue analgesia, and suture withdrawal was achieved 7 days post-surgery without complications. Impications: The abomasotomy technique here described can be used for parasitological studies in small ruminants when the collection of nematodes is required from live animals. Conclusions: The anesthetic and surgical protocol here described is a viable and rapid alternative for the collection of nematodes from the abomasum of live goats with minimal pain and rapid postsurgical recovery. ","PeriodicalId":23259,"journal":{"name":"Tropical and Subtropical Agroecosystems","volume":"13 5","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Tropical and Subtropical Agroecosystems","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.56369/tsaes.4985","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Agricultural and Biological Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Goats are increasingly being used as surgical models in animal experiments. Some ruminant parasitological studies require collecting adult nematodes directly from the abomasum of donor animals. A methodology to collect those adult worms in vivo could avoid the unnecessary sacrifice of donor animals. Objective: To describe an abomasotomy technique to obtain adult Haemonchus contortus from live goats and evaluate the immediate post-surgical recovery time. Methodology: Nine worm-free adult goats were infected with 6000 H. contortus L3. The monospecific infection was confirmed on day 28 post-infection. The anesthetic procedure included fentanyl (10 μg * kg BW-1 load dose (LD) and 10 μg * kg BW-1 hour in constant-rate-infusion (CRI), lidocaine (2 mg * kg LD-1 and 50 μg * kg BW-1 minute CRI), ketamine (1.5 mg * kg-1 and 50 μg * kg BW-1 min CRI) and propofol (4 mg * kg LD-1 and 0.4 mg * kg BW-1 min CRI). The surgical protocol consisted of eight “surgical time-points”. Purposeful animal movement in response to surgical stimulation, or any changes in the autonomic response (> 20% from baseline values of HR and arterial blood pressure (SAP, MAP, and DAP)) were used as criteria to identify trans-surgical nociception. Post-surgical pain was evaluated once daily with the wound healing evaluation. Results: The surgical protocol lasted 1 h, allowing the recovery of adult H. contortus from live goats. The anesthetic protocol successfully controlled trans-surgical pain, with only two animals crossing the HR threshold (>20%) from T2 to T6. Post-surgical recovery (“time to extubation” and “time to standing”) was achieved before 1 h, while animals consumed water after only 4 h post-surgery. Goats did not require rescue analgesia, and suture withdrawal was achieved 7 days post-surgery without complications. Impications: The abomasotomy technique here described can be used for parasitological studies in small ruminants when the collection of nematodes is required from live animals. Conclusions: The anesthetic and surgical protocol here described is a viable and rapid alternative for the collection of nematodes from the abomasum of live goats with minimal pain and rapid postsurgical recovery.
期刊介绍:
The journal is an international peer-reviewed publication devoted to disseminate original information contributing to the understanding and development of agroecosystems in tropical and subtropical areas. The Journal recognizes the multidisciplinary nature of its scope and encourages the submission of original manuscripts from all of the disciplines involved in this area. Original contributions are welcomed in relation to the study of particular components of the agroecosystems (i.e. plant, animal, soil) as well as the resulting interactions and their relationship/impact on society and environment. The journal does not received manuscripts based solely on economic acpects o food technology.