Impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: Taking the animal's perspective.

Laboratory mice are the most frequently used animals in biomedical research. In accordance with guidelines for humane handling, several blood sampling techniques have been established. While the effects of these procedures on blood quality and histological alterations at the sampling site are well s...

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Main Authors: Neele Meyer, Mareike Kröger, Julia Thümmler, Lisa Tietze, Rupert Palme, Chadi Touma
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238895
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spelling doaj-f81036fa4db1492baecd417881a6a80f2021-03-03T22:04:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01159e023889510.1371/journal.pone.0238895Impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: Taking the animal's perspective.Neele MeyerMareike KrögerJulia ThümmlerLisa TietzeRupert PalmeChadi ToumaLaboratory mice are the most frequently used animals in biomedical research. In accordance with guidelines for humane handling, several blood sampling techniques have been established. While the effects of these procedures on blood quality and histological alterations at the sampling site are well studied, their impact on the animals' welfare has not been extensively investigated. Therefore, our study aimed to compare three commonly used blood sampling techniques regarding their effects on different indicators of animal welfare, including physiological and behavioural response stress parameters, including pain measures, home-cage behaviour and nest-building as well as exploratory activity and neophobia. Male C57BL/6J mice were subjected to a single blood collection from either the vena facialis, the retrobulbar sinus or the tail vessel, or were allocated to the respective control treatment. While all blood sampling techniques led to an acute increase in plasma corticosterone levels, the response was strongest in animals that underwent sampling from the vena facialis and the retrobulbar sinus. Similar results were observed when the time-course of adrenocortical activity was monitored via corticosterone metabolites from faecal samples. Blood collection from the vena facialis and the retrobulbar sinus also decreased exploration of novel stimuli, resulted in decreased nest-building activity and induced higher scores in the Mouse Grimace Scale. Moreover, locomotor activity and anxiety-related behaviour were strongly affected after facial vein bleeding. Interestingly, tail vessel bleeding only induced little alterations in the assessed physiological and behavioural parameters. Importantly, the observed effects in all treatment groups were no longer detectable after 24 hours, indicating only short-term impacts. Thus, by also taking the animal's perspective and comprehensively assessing the severity of the particular sampling procedures, the results of our study contribute to Refinement within the 3R concept and allow researchers to objectively select the most appropriate and welfare-friendly blood sampling technique for a given experiment.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238895
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neele Meyer
Mareike Kröger
Julia Thümmler
Lisa Tietze
Rupert Palme
Chadi Touma
spellingShingle Neele Meyer
Mareike Kröger
Julia Thümmler
Lisa Tietze
Rupert Palme
Chadi Touma
Impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: Taking the animal's perspective.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Neele Meyer
Mareike Kröger
Julia Thümmler
Lisa Tietze
Rupert Palme
Chadi Touma
author_sort Neele Meyer
title Impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: Taking the animal's perspective.
title_short Impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: Taking the animal's perspective.
title_full Impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: Taking the animal's perspective.
title_fullStr Impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: Taking the animal's perspective.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: Taking the animal's perspective.
title_sort impact of three commonly used blood sampling techniques on the welfare of laboratory mice: taking the animal's perspective.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Laboratory mice are the most frequently used animals in biomedical research. In accordance with guidelines for humane handling, several blood sampling techniques have been established. While the effects of these procedures on blood quality and histological alterations at the sampling site are well studied, their impact on the animals' welfare has not been extensively investigated. Therefore, our study aimed to compare three commonly used blood sampling techniques regarding their effects on different indicators of animal welfare, including physiological and behavioural response stress parameters, including pain measures, home-cage behaviour and nest-building as well as exploratory activity and neophobia. Male C57BL/6J mice were subjected to a single blood collection from either the vena facialis, the retrobulbar sinus or the tail vessel, or were allocated to the respective control treatment. While all blood sampling techniques led to an acute increase in plasma corticosterone levels, the response was strongest in animals that underwent sampling from the vena facialis and the retrobulbar sinus. Similar results were observed when the time-course of adrenocortical activity was monitored via corticosterone metabolites from faecal samples. Blood collection from the vena facialis and the retrobulbar sinus also decreased exploration of novel stimuli, resulted in decreased nest-building activity and induced higher scores in the Mouse Grimace Scale. Moreover, locomotor activity and anxiety-related behaviour were strongly affected after facial vein bleeding. Interestingly, tail vessel bleeding only induced little alterations in the assessed physiological and behavioural parameters. Importantly, the observed effects in all treatment groups were no longer detectable after 24 hours, indicating only short-term impacts. Thus, by also taking the animal's perspective and comprehensively assessing the severity of the particular sampling procedures, the results of our study contribute to Refinement within the 3R concept and allow researchers to objectively select the most appropriate and welfare-friendly blood sampling technique for a given experiment.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0238895
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