Metabolic Cage Analysis of Surgically Catheterized C57BL/6J Mice (Mus musculus) Treated with Carprofen and Sustained-Release Buprenorphine.

Jui Rose Tu, Marissa Saenz, Elizabeth Bloom-Saldana, Patrick T Fueger
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Abstract

Federal regulations require that appropriate analgesia be provided to laboratory animals for pain control. Carprofen and buprenorphine are 2 common analgesics used for laboratory mice (Mus musculus). However, given the potential gastrointestinal side effects that these analgesics have in various species, the impact of these analgesics on mice used in metabolic studies could be concerning. To investigate the impact of carprofen and sustained-release buprenorphine on food consumption, activity level, and whole-body metabolism, we administered carprofen alone or in combination with sustained-release buprenorphine to mice that underwent jugular vein and carotid artery catheterization, or a sham surgery. The mice were individually housed in instrumented metabolic cages to continuously quantify food consumption, activity levels, and energy expenditure by indirect calorimetry. We hypothesized that catheterized mice receiving both carprofen and sustained-release buprenorphine would have decreased food consumption and increased activity level compared with mice which received sham surgery and carprofen, and that catheterized mice treated with carprofen only would have similar food consumption and activity level as sham mice which received carprofen. Our results demonstrate that during the initial 12 hours after surgery, catheterized mice that received both carprofen and sustained-release buprenorphine were more active than sham mice which received carprofen, and they were more active and consumed more food than catheterized mice which received carprofen only. Our study demonstrated that analgesia regimen can affect metabolic parameters, thus, researchers should carefully consider the effects that analgesic drugs can have on mice when designing metabolic or behavioral experiments.

卡洛芬与丁丙诺啡缓释联合治疗C57BL/6J小家鼠的代谢笼分析
联邦法规要求为实验动物提供适当的镇痛药以控制疼痛。卡洛芬和丁丙诺啡是实验小鼠常用的两种镇痛药。然而,鉴于这些镇痛药在不同物种中具有潜在的胃肠道副作用,这些镇痛药对用于代谢研究的小鼠的影响可能令人担忧。为了研究卡洛芬和缓释丁丙诺啡对食物消耗、活动水平和全身代谢的影响,我们给接受颈静脉和颈动脉导管置入或假手术的小鼠单独或联合使用卡洛芬或缓释丁丙诺啡。这些小鼠被单独安置在仪器代谢笼中,通过间接量热法连续量化食物消耗、活动水平和能量消耗。我们假设同时接受卡洛芬和缓释丁丙诺啡的插管小鼠与接受假手术和卡洛芬的小鼠相比,会减少食物消耗和增加活动水平,并且仅接受卡洛芬的插管小鼠与接受卡洛芬的假手术小鼠的食物消耗和活动水平相似。我们的研究结果表明,在术后最初的12小时内,同时服用卡洛芬和缓释丁丙诺啡的导管小鼠比服用卡洛芬的假小鼠更活跃,比只服用卡洛芬的导管小鼠更活跃,消耗更多的食物。我们的研究表明,镇痛方案可以影响代谢参数,因此,研究人员在设计代谢或行为实验时应仔细考虑镇痛药物对小鼠的影响。
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