Evaluation of Active Warming and Surgical Draping for Perioperative Thermal Support in Laboratory Mice.

IF 1.2 3区 农林科学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science Pub Date : 2022-09-01 DOI:10.30802/AALAS-JAALAS-21-000036
Kaitlyn T Bailey, Sanket R Jantre, Frank R Lawrence, F Claire Hankenson, Jacquelyn M Del Valle
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Surgical procedures are commonly performed using mice but can have major effects on their core body temperature, including development of hypothermia. In this study, we evaluated active perioperative warming with and without surgical draping with adherent plastic wrap to refine practices, improve animal welfare, and optimize research experiments. Mice were randomized into treatment groups (n = 6; 8 CD1 mice per group). Treatments included placement within a small-animal forced-air incubator at 38 ° C for 30 min before surgery (Pre), after surgery (Post), or before and after surgery (Both). To explore the effect of surgical draping, one group received incubator warming before and after surgery in addition to surgical draping (Both/ Drape), whereas another group received surgical draping only without incubator warming (Control/Drape). The final group of mice received neither warming nor draping (Control). Subcutaneous temperature transponders were placed in all mice. Approximately 5 d after transponder placement, mice were anesthetized with ketamine-xylazine and underwent laparotomy. Subcutaneous body temperatures were collected perioperatively from transponders, and rectal temperatures were taken every minute during surgery. For recovery from anesthesia, mice were placed either in a standard cage on a warm water blanket set to 38 °C (100.4 °F) or in the incubator. Subcutaneous body temperatures were significantly higher in mice prewarmed for 30 min (Pre, Both, Both/Drape) as compared with mice that were not prewarmed. Anesthetic recovery times were significantly longer for mice placed in the incubator (Pre, Post, Both, Both/Drape) than for those that did not receive incubator warming (Control, Control/Drape). Mean intraoperative rectal temperatures of Both/Drape mice tended to be greater than those of mice in the Both group, suggesting a warming benefit of surgical draping. Using a forced air incubator and adherent plastic draping mitigated body temperature loss in mice during both surgery and postoperative recovery.

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实验小鼠围手术期热支持的主动加热和手术悬垂的评价。
外科手术通常在小鼠身上进行,但会对小鼠的核心体温产生重大影响,包括体温过低。在这项研究中,我们评估了主动围手术期暖化与不手术悬垂伴贴保鲜膜,以改进实践,改善动物福利,优化研究实验。将小鼠随机分为治疗组(n = 6;每组8只CD1小鼠)。处理包括术前、术后或术前、术后(均)在38°C的小动物强制空气培养箱中放置30分钟。为了探讨手术悬垂的效果,一组在手术悬垂的基础上术前和术后分别进行培养箱预热(Both/ Drape),另一组只进行手术悬垂而不进行培养箱预热(Control/Drape)。最后一组小鼠既不接受加热也不接受悬垂(对照组)。在所有小鼠体内放置皮下温度应答器。在应答器放置后约5 d,小鼠被氯胺酮-二嗪麻醉并进行剖腹手术。术中通过应答器收集皮下体温,术中每分钟测量一次直肠温度。为了从麻醉中恢复过来,小鼠被放置在一个标准的笼子里,上面铺着38°C(100.4°F)的温水毯,或者放在培养箱里。与未预热的小鼠相比,预热30分钟(Pre, Both, Both/Drape)小鼠的皮下体温显著升高。放置在培养箱中的小鼠(前、后、同时、同时/覆盖)的麻醉恢复时间明显长于未接受培养箱加热的小鼠(对照组、对照组/覆盖)。两组/悬垂组小鼠的平均术中直肠温度往往高于两组小鼠,这表明手术悬垂具有增温作用。在手术和术后恢复期间,使用强制空气培养箱和粘附塑料悬垂减轻了小鼠的体温损失。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.10
自引率
35.30%
发文量
122
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science (JAALAS) serves as an official communication vehicle for the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science (AALAS). The journal includes a section of refereed articles and a section of AALAS association news. All signed articles, including refereed articles and book reviews, editorials, committee reports, and news and commentary, reflect the individual views of the authors and are not official views of AALAS. The mission of the refereed section of the journal is to disseminate high-quality, peer-reviewed information on animal biology, technology, facility operations, management, and compliance as relevant to the AALAS membership. JAALAS accepts research reports (data-based) or scholarly reports (literature-based), with the caveat that all articles, including solicited manuscripts, must include appropriate references and must undergo peer review.
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