Blood sampling from the retro-orbital plexus, the saphenous vein and the tail vein in rats: comparative effects on selected behavioural and blood variables
We compared the behaviours of rats, and measured various blood parameters, after three blood sampling techniques: orbital puncture while they were under diethyl-ether anaesthesia, blood collection by tail vein puncture under O2-N 2O-halothane anaesthesia and puncture of the saphenous vein without an...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Laboratory animals (London) 2001-04, Vol.35 (2), p.131-139 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We compared the behaviours of rats, and measured various blood parameters, after
three blood sampling techniques: orbital puncture while they were under diethyl-ether
anaesthesia, blood collection by tail vein puncture under O2-N
2O-halothane anaesthesia and puncture of the saphenous vein without
anaesthesia. Twelve rats were subjected to the three treatments according to a Latin
square design. After each treatment, the behaviour of the rats was automatically
monitored using the so-called LABORASTM method, which discriminates
between grooming, locomotion and inactivity in rats. Based on excitation scores and
urine production, it was found that induction of diethyl-ether anaesthesia combined
with orbital puncture caused more distress than did the other two blood sampling
techniques. The three techniques had no differential effects on the behaviours of
grooming, locomotion and inactivity. Collecting 0.5 ml of blood by orbital puncture
was ± 7 times faster than doing so by saphenous vein puncture and ± 15 times faster
than collecting blood by tail vein puncture while the rats were under O2-N
2O-halothane anaesthesia. The levels of some haematological and plasma
variables differed significantly between the three blood collection techniques. These
observations may help to select the most appropriate technique of blood sampling with
respect to anticipated discomfort in the animals. |
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ISSN: | 0023-6772 1758-1117 |
DOI: | 10.1258/0023677011911499 |