100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached
logo-home
Summary - Laboratory Animal Science (E05E6D) $7.49
Add to cart

Summary

Summary - Laboratory Animal Science (E05E6D)

1 review
 306 views  26 purchases
  • Course
  • Institution

Summary of the course and powerpoints. I obtained a 20/20 because of this.

Preview 4 out of 37  pages

  • July 8, 2023
  • 37
  • 2022/2023
  • Summary

1  review

review-writer-avatar

By: groenethee • 7 months ago

avatar-seller
H1: Legislation
1. Numbers
 Worldwide: 100 million
 Europe: 12 million
 Belgium: 700.708 animals
1) Rodents (81%)
2) Rabbits (9%)
3) Fish, amphibians, reptiles (5%)
4) Birds (3%)
5) Farm animals (<1%)
6) Dogs, cats, primates (<0.1%)

USE OF LABORATORY ANIMALS IS FLUCTUATING  DEVELOPMENT OF TRANSGENIC ANIMALS ,
DEVELOPMENT OF ALTERNATIVES + ETHICS/LEGISLATION + HIGH COSTS + MORE RESPONSIBLE USE

2. Overview of national and European legislation
 Belgian law: August 1986
 Royal Decree: 14 November 1993  update of law
 New BRD: April 2010  stricter rules concerning housing
 New European Directive: September 2010  include pain, suffering, discomfort

TRANSLATION INTO BELGIAN LAW IS PENDING!

Laboratory animal= every living vertebrate animal used or intended for laboratory experiments

 Including: free living and/or reproducing larval forms (axolotl)
 Excluding: other foetal or embryonic forms

WHAT WILL CHANGE WITH NEW LEGISLATION?

 Include some invertebrates (Cephalopoda: squid, lobster, fish)
 Include mammalian embryonic forms starting from last 1/3 of term

Animal experiment= every use of living vertebrate animal for experimental and other scientific
purposes  can inflict pain + suffering + discomfort + permanent injury

 Including: treatment with birth of such animal as consequence
 Excluding: non-experimental treatments (agriculture, veterinary) + least painful, accepted
method to kill/mark animal (humane methods)

ANIMAL SHOULD NOT BE USED MORE THAN ONCE IN EXPERIMENTS WITH SUFFERING/PAIN!

Mild pain  Administration anaesthesia
 Non-invasive imaging (MRI)
 Superficial procedures (ear, tail biopsies)
Moderate pain  Surgery under general anaesthesia + post-surgical pain
 Induction of tumours + development spontaneous tumours
 Irradiation with sublethal dose
Serious pain  Toxicity + vaccine potency testing
 Irradiation with lethal dose

1

, A. Purpose of laboratory animals

a) Production + control of sera, vaccines, diagnostics
b) Toxicological/ pharmacological research
c) Diagnose of disease
d) Education
e) Answer scientific questions
 NOT ALLOWED TO TEST COSMETIC PRODUCTS!

B. Housing and taking care of lab animals

1) Housing conditions + environment + feed + water + care: meet animals needs
2) Daily control of animals + environment
3) Regular control by vet

C. Source and identi fi cati on of lab animals

1) No stray pets, lost/abandoned animals
2) Purpose-bred by licensed breeding companies
3) Special demands for threatened species living in wild
 DOGS + CATS + PRIMATES: MARKED INDIVIDUALLY AFTER WEANING
 KEEP REGISTER OF ANIMALS COMING IN AND LEAVING LAB

D. Responsible use of lab animals

1) Restricted to absolute minimum
2) Only allowed if purpose cannot be achieved by other methods
3) Choice of species must be seriously considered
4) USE ANIMALS WITH LOWEST NEUROPHYSIOLOGIC DEGREE!
5) Never subject to pain + discomfort + suffering  anaesthesia if not able to avoid  not
possible: use analgesics to decrease pain/suffering

E. What do you need before experimenti ng?

1) Governmental laboratory license: list of species and source, rooms, experiments, staff
 laboratory director + experts + project leaders + animal caretakers + biotechnicians
2) Permission of ethical committee: since 2001
 laboratory director + vet/expert + project leader + animal caretaker + >2 INDEPENDENT
MEMBERS
3) Education: since October 2004
4) Import license: importing animals from non-EU member states
5) Bio-security dossier
6) Radio-activity use in lab animals

3. The 3 R’s
Reduction= choosing well the experimental design + standardising the lab animal population and
experimental procedures

Replacement= replacing animal experiments with another method or invertebrate



2

,Refinement= gathering knowledge about biological needs of animal (apply analgesia + less
discomfort + environmental enrichment)

4. Changes in legislation
 Changes in composition of ethical committee
 Definition of laboratory animal has changed
 Continuous education

Animal welfare body (AWB)= set up by every user, advise on animal welfare (accommodation, care
and use) + review internal operational processes  scientist + vet/expert + caretaker

 GOAL: IMPROVE ANIMAL WELFARE + TRANSPARANCY

ALL ANIMALS USED IN CREATION OF NEW TRANSGENIC LINE HAVE TO BE REPORTED  INCREASES
TOTAL NUMBER OF ANIMALS IN STATISTICS!

Animal welfare assessment (AWA)= give info about possible harm that is being inflicted to animals
(pain + disability + short lifespan + tumors + neurological disorders)  check breeding + anomalies +
abnormal behaviour

 Decide whether phenotype of transgenic line is harmful or not
 Try to decrease suffering through fe environmental changes
 DISADVANTAGE: MORE WORK
 ADVANTAGE: MORE ATTENTION GIVEN TO EFFECT OF DNA CHANGE ON HEALTH ANIMAL +
PEOPLE KNOW BETTER HOW TO ELEVIATE PAIN/SUFFERING

GS1 Wild type animals
GS2 Genetically altered animals – non-harmful phenotype
GS3 Genetically altered animals – harmful phenotype  need approval of ethical committee



H2: Safety in the animal facility
1. Physical hazards
 Avoid danger/risks for yourself and environment
 Avoid occupational disease

Trauma Sharp objects:
- needles, glass fragments, scalpels, syringes
- NEVER RECAP NEEDLES  use containers
Machines and material:
- must be maintained well
- wear protective clothing + follow safety rules
Maintenance:
- keep surface clean
- remove obstruction from emergency exit
- wet floor  slippery
Light:
- don’t work in dark environment
Ergonomic hazard:
- poor posture when working at lab table + lift heavy loads

3

, - repeating same movement frequently  injury (repetitive strain injury)
Bite- and scratch wounds:
- minimalised by proper training
- dogs>cats>rodents  cat wounds are deep (damage to tendons, bones,
joints) + dog wounds cause necrosis (good culture to grow bacteria)
- chance of infection=site of bite (better vascularisation  less infection) +
extend of contamination (mouth flora aggressor + skin flora victim)
Capnocytophaga canimorsus: infection after dog- or catbite  symptoms: nausea,
diarrhea, muscular pain + intravasal coagulation around wound (tissue necrosis) +
general sepsis (people with decreased resistance)
Streptobacillus moniliformis + Spirillium minus: infection after mouse- or ratbite
 respiratory distress + abscesses/ general sepsis + periods of fever +
myocarditis/meningitis/pneumonia (SYMPTOMS ONLY SEVERAL WEEKS AFTER
BITE)

Most bite wounds: rodents  check tetanus vaccination + have wound checked by
doctor + have vet check animal
Combustible - wood, paper, plastic
material – - inflammable gasses and liquids: alcohol, ether
fire and - liquid nitrogen
burning - electrical apparatus: lamp
Noise - animals: dogs + pigs
- machines: high pressure cleaning, washing machine
 Wear ear protection (>85dB) to avoid hearing damage
Electricity - can cause shock + electrocution
- repair broken cables
Apparatus - autoclaves: regular maintenance + testing necessary
under - bottles of gas: secure tight with chain (prevent falling) + do not put in
pressure direct light
 Use face protection when heating solutions
Radiation Lasers:
- hazardous for the eyes
UV radiation (255 nm):
- cannot penetrate deeper than 1 mm in biological tissue
- Acute effects: inflammation of cornea and conjunctiva of eyes (effects
reversible)
- Longterm effects: turbidness of lens, skin tumours
- NEVER USE WHEN SOMEONE IS IN THE ROOM
Ionising radiation:
a) Alpha-radiation: stopped by piece of paper  uranium, plutonium
b) Beta-radiation: pass through skin, stopped by thick piece paper/plastic
c) Gamma-radiation: photons, stopped by lead
- Internal contamination: breathing, oral intake of radioactive substances
(bedding or faeces of animals)
- External contamination: radioactive source sends out ionising radiation
within space in which you are present
 Work in hood + use drip trays
 Prevent aerosol + dust  bedding material
 Wear gloves + protection screen
 Follow proper training
 Keep distance to source


4

The benefits of buying summaries with Stuvia:

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Guaranteed quality through customer reviews

Stuvia customers have reviewed more than 700,000 summaries. This how you know that you are buying the best documents.

Quick and easy check-out

Quick and easy check-out

You can quickly pay through credit card or Stuvia-credit for the summaries. There is no membership needed.

Focus on what matters

Focus on what matters

Your fellow students write the study notes themselves, which is why the documents are always reliable and up-to-date. This ensures you quickly get to the core!

Frequently asked questions

What do I get when I buy this document?

You get a PDF, available immediately after your purchase. The purchased document is accessible anytime, anywhere and indefinitely through your profile.

Satisfaction guarantee: how does it work?

Our satisfaction guarantee ensures that you always find a study document that suits you well. You fill out a form, and our customer service team takes care of the rest.

Who am I buying these notes from?

Stuvia is a marketplace, so you are not buying this document from us, but from seller freyavandeneynde16. Stuvia facilitates payment to the seller.

Will I be stuck with a subscription?

No, you only buy these notes for $7.49. You're not tied to anything after your purchase.

Can Stuvia be trusted?

4.6 stars on Google & Trustpilot (+1000 reviews)

53068 documents were sold in the last 30 days

Founded in 2010, the go-to place to buy study notes for 14 years now

Start selling
$7.49  26x  sold
  • (1)
Add to cart
Added