Contemporary topics in laboratory animal science / American Association for Laboratory Animal Science
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Contemp Top Lab Anim Sci · Nov 2002
Pain evaluation and response to buprenorphine in rats subjected to sham middle cerebral artery occlusion.
Appropriate and efficacious use of analgesics in rodents must be balanced judiciously between animal needs and research objectives. A concern in many studies is that analgesia will confound experimental outcome or interpretation. Accordingly, determining whether rats subjected to surgical protocols show evidence of pain is important if we are to provide rational postoperative analgesia without compromising experimental objectives. ⋯ Postoperatively, all treatment groups showed elevated assessment scores relative to baseline values. Buprenorphine at the tested doses did not markedly reduce total assessment scores postoperatively relative to those in vehicle-treated animals. Further evaluation of rodent postoperative pain and response to analgesia is needed if we are to formulate a sound scientific approach to animal management in protocols requiring surgical manipulations.