Handling methods of laboratory mice and rats

Stress and anxiety in laboratory mice and rats can affect not only their welfare, but also research results. It is also known that daily routines such as handling can be stressful. However, the question of whether different handling methods are more or less stressful is perhaps more interesting, and...

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Autor principal: Lydén, Frida
Formato: M2
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) 2016
Materias:
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author Lydén, Frida
author_browse Lydén, Frida
author_facet Lydén, Frida
author_sort Lydén, Frida
collection Epsilon Archive for Student Projects
description Stress and anxiety in laboratory mice and rats can affect not only their welfare, but also research results. It is also known that daily routines such as handling can be stressful. However, the question of whether different handling methods are more or less stressful is perhaps more interesting, and there is not much published research on the subject. When writing a scientific paper, it is always essential to document all relevant parameters and details in the methods, in order for the results to be credible, and to make sure that the experiment can be replicated and accurately peer reviewed. If different handling methods can cause different amounts of stress and anxiety, thus possibly affecting research results, then handling methods ought to be included as relevant information in article methods. The aim of this literature review is to investigate how different handling methods can affect both animal welfare and research quality. Furthermore, to analyse to what extent handling is reported in article methods, the method sections of ten recently published articles from Nature Neuroscience and Nature Immunology respectively - two high impact factor journals using mice and/or rat models - were reviewed and compiled. The literature review showed evidence of alternative handling methods sections, such as using tunnels or cupped hands when picking up mice and rats, having positive impacts on animal welfare and consequently possibly on data reliability, when compared to stressful traditional handling methods such as lifting by the tail. The data compiled from article methods showed that reports of handling methods were lacking across all reviewed articles, regardless of journal or year. It is concluded that using the least stressful handling methods, identified in the reviewed literature, goes in accordance with the refinement and reduction principles of the 3Rs. Methods such as using tunnels or cupped hands when lifting laboratory mice and rats, instead of lifting by the tail or body, should therefore be recommended. It is also suggested that handling should be added as a method criteria in checklists and guidelines such as NC3Rs ARRIVE guidelines or journals’ own methods checklists that are used by authors.
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institution Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
language Inglés
publishDate 2016
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publisher SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231)
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spelling RepoSLU94612016-08-23T14:54:33Z Handling methods of laboratory mice and rats Hanteringsmetoder av försöksmöss och råttor Lydén, Frida handling methods mice rats welfare laboratory routines Stress and anxiety in laboratory mice and rats can affect not only their welfare, but also research results. It is also known that daily routines such as handling can be stressful. However, the question of whether different handling methods are more or less stressful is perhaps more interesting, and there is not much published research on the subject. When writing a scientific paper, it is always essential to document all relevant parameters and details in the methods, in order for the results to be credible, and to make sure that the experiment can be replicated and accurately peer reviewed. If different handling methods can cause different amounts of stress and anxiety, thus possibly affecting research results, then handling methods ought to be included as relevant information in article methods. The aim of this literature review is to investigate how different handling methods can affect both animal welfare and research quality. Furthermore, to analyse to what extent handling is reported in article methods, the method sections of ten recently published articles from Nature Neuroscience and Nature Immunology respectively - two high impact factor journals using mice and/or rat models - were reviewed and compiled. The literature review showed evidence of alternative handling methods sections, such as using tunnels or cupped hands when picking up mice and rats, having positive impacts on animal welfare and consequently possibly on data reliability, when compared to stressful traditional handling methods such as lifting by the tail. The data compiled from article methods showed that reports of handling methods were lacking across all reviewed articles, regardless of journal or year. It is concluded that using the least stressful handling methods, identified in the reviewed literature, goes in accordance with the refinement and reduction principles of the 3Rs. Methods such as using tunnels or cupped hands when lifting laboratory mice and rats, instead of lifting by the tail or body, should therefore be recommended. It is also suggested that handling should be added as a method criteria in checklists and guidelines such as NC3Rs ARRIVE guidelines or journals’ own methods checklists that are used by authors. SLU/Dept. of Animal Environment and Health (until 231231) 2016 M2 eng https://stud.epsilon.slu.se/9461/
spellingShingle handling methods
mice
rats
welfare
laboratory routines
Lydén, Frida
Handling methods of laboratory mice and rats
title Handling methods of laboratory mice and rats
title_full Handling methods of laboratory mice and rats
title_fullStr Handling methods of laboratory mice and rats
title_full_unstemmed Handling methods of laboratory mice and rats
title_short Handling methods of laboratory mice and rats
title_sort handling methods of laboratory mice and rats
topic handling methods
mice
rats
welfare
laboratory routines