牛的疼痛病理生理学和药理学:加深了解如何加强疼痛预防、缓解和福利。

IF 2.5 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Frontiers in pain research (Lausanne, Switzerland) Pub Date : 2024-08-27 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fpain.2024.1396992
Abigale H Zoltick, Sabine Mann, Johann F Coetzee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在全球范围内,人类依赖牛来生产食物;然而,社会对农场动物福利的关注却在不断增加。为奶牛和肉牛生产而饲养的牛从幼年起就会因日常管理程序和常见疾病而感到疼痛。疼痛感知所需的基本机制、痛觉通路和中枢神经系统结构在哺乳动物物种之间高度保守。然而,由于物种间疼痛表达的差异,疼痛评估的比较方法存在局限性。猎物物种的拘谨可能会妨碍对疼痛的识别,并导致认为牛缺乏对疼痛的敏感性。这凸显了建立有效的牛特有疼痛指标的重要性--这是基于证据的疼痛评估和缓解的先决条件。我们的第一个目标是概述疼痛的病理生理学,以说明有针对性的镇痛在畜牧医学中的重要性,以及未缓解的疼痛对动物福利造成的负面影响。随后,我们回顾了现有的镇痛剂、使用规定以及实施农场疼痛管理的障碍。然后,我们调查了目前为评估牛的疼痛反应而开展的研究--这是药物审批过程中的一个关键环节。最后,我们以动物认知和疼痛病理学方面的新兴研究为重点,讨论了疼痛对牛只福利的重大影响,以及需要进一步研究和改进实践的领域。
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Pain pathophysiology and pharmacology of cattle: how improved understanding can enhance pain prevention, mitigation, and welfare.

Globally, humans rely on cattle for food production; however, there is rising societal concern surrounding the welfare of farm animals. From a young age, cattle raised for dairy and beef production experience pain caused by routine management procedures and common disease conditions. The fundamental mechanisms, nociceptive pathways, and central nervous system structures required for pain perception are highly conserved among mammalian species. However, there are limitations to a comparative approach to pain assessment due to interspecies differences in the expression of pain. The stoicism of prey species may impede pain identification and lead to the assumption that cattle lack pain sensitivity. This highlights the importance of establishing validated bovine-specific indicators of pain-a prerequisite for evidence-based pain assessment and mitigation. Our first objective is to provide an overview of pain pathophysiology to illustrate the importance of targeted analgesia in livestock medicine and the negative welfare outcomes associated with unmitigated pain. This is followed by a review of available analgesics, the regulations governing their use, and barriers to implementation of on-farm pain management. We then investigate the current research undertaken to evaluate the pain response in cattle-a critical aspect of the drug approval process. With an emphasis on emerging research in animal cognition and pain pathology, we conclude by discussing the significant influence that pain has on cattle welfare and areas where further research and modified practices are indicated.

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