确定小鼠的死后间隔时间

Rachel R Howie, Michael M McKinney, Nicholas M Tataryn, Allysa L Cole, William D Dupont, Tzushan S Yang, Katherine N Gibson-Corley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管小鼠主要用于生物医学研究,但在确定小鼠的死后变化以及利用这些信息确定死后间隔(PMI)(定义为死亡后的时间)方面,却鲜有资料可查。死后间隔和环境条件都会影响分解(自溶和腐败)和其他死后变化。严重的腐烂会影响病变解读和疾病检测,并浪费有限的病理资源。本研究的目的是评估小鼠在室温笼养条件下和 4 °C冷藏条件下的死后变化,为进一步的大体和组织学评估的潜在价值制定大体标准。我们使用了 108 只未经实验的 C57BL/6 小鼠,对这些小鼠实施了人道安乐死,然后将它们分为 2 个实验组,以评估死后变化:室温(20 至 22 °C)或冷藏(4 °C)。在第 0、4、8 和 12 小时以及第 1 至 14 天进行 PMI 评估,包括大体变化和组织学评分。温度、湿度、笼中氨气和体重变化等因素也被记录在案。我们的数据表明,在室温下保存的胴体比冷藏的胴体分解得更快。就大多数组织而言,室温下 12 小时就会出现明显的腐烂,而冷藏条件下则为 5 天。在室温下,小鼠在第 2 天就出现了严重变化,而在冷藏条件下则是第 7 天。室温下小鼠每天体重下降 0.78%,而冷藏小鼠每天体重下降 0.06%(95% CI 差异为 0.67% 至 0.76%,P < 0.0005)。这项研究支持将温度和 PMI 视为影响死后组织是否适合进行大体和组织学评估的重要因素,并表明在冷藏条件下贮存尸体将显著减缓自溶。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Determination of Postmortem Interval in Mice.

Despite the major use of mice in biomedical research, little information is available with regard to identifying their postmortem changes and using that information to determine the postmortem interval (PMI), defined as the time after death. Both PMI and environmental conditions influence decomposition (autolysis and putrefaction) and other postmortem changes. Severe decomposition compromises lesion interpretation and disease detection and wastes limited pathology resources. The goal of this study was to assess postmortem changes in mice in room temperature cage conditions and under refrigeration at 4 °C to develop gross criteria for the potential value of further gross and histologic evaluation. We used 108 experimentally naïve C57BL/6 mice that were humanely euthanized and then allocated them into 2 experimental groups for evaluation of postmortem change: room temperature (20 to 22 °C) or refrigeration (4 °C). PMI assessments, including gross changes and histologic scoring, were performed at hours 0, 4, 8, and 12 and on days 1 to 14. Factors such as temperature, humidity, ammonia in the cage, and weight change were also documented. Our data indicates that carcasses held at room temperature decomposed faster than refrigerated carcasses. For most tissues, decomposition was evident by 12 h at room temperature as compared with 5 d under refrigeration. At room temperature, gross changes were present by day 2 as compared with day 7 under refrigeration. Mice at room temperature lost 0.78% of their baseline body weight per day as compared with 0.06% for refrigerated mice (95% CI for difference 0.67% to 0.76%, P < 0.0005). This study supports the consideration of temperature and PMI as important factors affecting the suitability of postmortem tissues for gross and histologic evaluation and indicates that storage of carcasses under refrigeration will significantly slow autolysis.

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