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Laboratory Animals

Laboratory Animals . Part 2. The Dog Canis familiaris. They have been used as experimental subjects since the 17 th century. Valuable for research in physiology, pharmacology, surgery, nutrition and behavior studies, heart surgery, and diabetes Obtained from municipal animal pounds

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Laboratory Animals

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  1. Laboratory Animals Part 2

  2. The DogCanisfamiliaris • They have been used as experimental subjects since the 17th century. • Valuable for research in physiology, pharmacology, surgery, nutrition and behavior studies, heart surgery, and diabetes • Obtained from municipal animal pounds • Since they are stray, it can be expected that they are infested with internal and external parasites and possibly other disease-producing organisms

  3. The Dog • Beagle is the most used as research animals • Dogs are usually devocalized when brought into a facility to prevent excessive barking • The procedure is where they partially remove vocal cords with an instrument inserted through mouth • Cords may repair or grow again and procedure might be repeated

  4. The CatFeliscatus • Used as research animals towards the end of the 19th century • Used for physiological, anatomical, pharmacological and behavioral studies • Short haired types are used more than long haired breeds

  5. Nonhuman Primates • Used since they closely relate to humans • Reproduce poorly under domesticated or laboratory conditions and must be captured in the wild • Most difficult of the animals to handle in a laboratory • Long gestation period and only one child is produced per pregnancy

  6. Nonhuman Primates • Belong to the order Primata meaning first • Rhesus monkey (macacamulatta) is most widely used in research

  7. Main Groups • Simians • Baboons • The great apes • Gorilla • Chimpanzee • Orangutan • Gibbon

  8. Main Groups • Monkeys • Prosimians • Tree shrews; lemurs and other of family Lemuridae; Lorises and Tarsiers • Geographical Groups • Old world monkeys • Macaca species and usually weigh 5-14 kilograms • Vervet or African green monkey, Sykes monkey, Mangebeys • New world monkeys • Squirrel, owl, ringtail, spider, wooley monkeys; Tamarins and marmosets

  9. Old World Monkeys • Apes are the largest and have no tail • Chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) is used most often • Gorillas and chimpanzees are primarily terrestrial but nest in trees • Apes are herbivorous and frugivorous (fruit eating) and also eat insects • Native to Asia, Africa and South Pacific islands • Can get tuberculosis and carriers of B-virus • Some have cheek pouches and do not have prehensile tails ( can grab with tails)

  10. Baboons • Baboons are smaller than apes (male 20kg; female 10kg) • Primarily terrestrial • Very hardy • Live in closed social systems • Essentially vegetarian but eat insects and small animals

  11. New world monkeys • Native to Central and South America • Do not have cheek pouches and have prehensile tails • All are aboreal (living in trees) • Resistant to tuberculosis and do not carry B-virus

  12. Prosimians • Found in Asia and Africa • Relatively small animals • Nongregarious – do not live in groups • Mature rapidly • Two or three pairs of mammary glands • Dentition (teeth) specialized for grooming • Cutaceous glands specialized for territorial mating

  13. How do they pick the animals? • Animals should not be selected randomly for an experiment but should be chosen on the basis of certain principles which would provide the most appropriate animal model. • One basis for the selection of a species is the general anatomical and physiological relationship of the small animal to the large animal of interest.

  14. How do they pick the animals? • The second guideline is an animal or species may be selected for an experiment on the basis of specific characteristic which provides the desirable model for a certain type of experiment. • The third guideline used relates to the previous history of the use of the species for a prescribed type of experiment.

  15. Modified Animal Models • Modification of the microbial environment • Keeping animals in isolation • Germ-free (axenic) animals are obtained under sterile conditions by Cesarean section from pregnant females • Young are fed artificially on a special sterile diet and must be maintained in sterile isolators • The air, water, food, bedding and any other items in isolator must be sterile

  16. Modified Animal Models • Pathogen-free animals • Organisms that are free of pathogens ( infections) • Environment is not sterile but keep pathogen free • Obtained by Cesarean section under aseptic conditions • Housing should be maintained so pathogenic organisms may not enter and there should be periodic checks of the facility

  17. Modified Animal Models • Specific pathogen free animals • Identified by the International Committee on Laboratory Animals as those that are free of specified microorganisms and parasites, but not necessarily free of others not named • Maintained like the pathogen-free animals • Gnotobiotic – known biota • Conventional Animals • Normal animals which are not obtained or maintained with any special microbial protection

  18. Animal Models Developed by Breeding Techniques • Application of genetic and breeding techniques has made possible the production of a large number of inbred strains. • An animal is considered inbred after 20 generations of consecutive brother x sister or parent x child mating. • Animals which are not inbred are referred to as non-inbred

  19. Animal Models Developed by Breeding Techniques • Different biological models which have been developed: • Low incidence of lung cancer • High incidence of leukemia • Hairlessness • Susceptibility to salmonella infection • High incidence of gastric tumors • Low incidence of mammary tumors • Susceptibility to tuberculosis • Resistance or susceptibility to certain tumor transplants • Resistance or susceptibility to dental caries • Susceptibility or resistance to chemical carcinogens

  20. Surgical and Physiological Modification • Removal or partial removal of a gland, organ, or tissue • Nutritional alterations • Diseased states • If a modification interferes with essential life processes, some artificial means of maintaining these processes must be provided • These alterations make possible effective research and may shorten the time required for results

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