Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4323562 Brain Research 2016 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Suitability of reversal anesthesia (MMF) was compared with chloral hydrate.•Chloral hydrate cannot be recommended due to pronounced systemic toxicity.•MMF led to local myositis and exophthalmos, which limits its use in research.•Reversal of MMF caused undesired effects.•Rodent anesthesia has to be assessed by subjective and objective parameters.

Although injectable anesthetics are still widely used in laboratory rodents, scientific data concerning pain and distress during and after stereotactic surgery are rare. However, optimal anesthesia protocols have a high impact on the quality of the derived data. We therefore investigated the suitability of recommended injectable anesthesia with a traditionally used monoanesthesia for stereotactic surgery in view of optimization and refinement in rats. The influence of the recommended complete reversal anesthesia (MMF; 0.15 mg/kg medetomidine, 2 mg/kg midazolam, 0.005 mg/kg fentanyl; i.m.) with or without reversal and of chloral hydrate (430 mg/kg, 3.6%, i.p.) on various physiological, biochemical and behavioral parameters (before, during, after surgery) was analyzed. Isoflurane was also included in stress parameter analysis. In all groups, depth of anesthesia was sufficient for stereotactic surgery with no animal losses. MMF caused transient exophthalmos, myositis at the injection site and increased early postoperative pain scores. Reversal induced agitation, restlessness and hypothermia. Even the low concentrated chloral hydrate led to peritonitis and multifocal liver necrosis, corresponding to increased stress hormone levels and loss in body weight. Increased stress response was also exerted by isoflurane anesthesia. Pronounced systemic toxicity of chloral hydrate strongly questions its further use in rodent anesthesia. In view of undesired effects of MMF and isoflurane, thorough consideration of anesthesia protocols for particular research projects is indispensable. Reversal should be restricted to emergency situations. Our data support further refinement of the current protocols and the importance of sham operated controls.

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