care and use of vertebrate animals

30
Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals Dr. Janet Whaley Veterinarian for UMCES IACUC 1

Upload: marius

Post on 23-Feb-2016

41 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals. Dr. Janet Whaley Veterinarian for UMCES IACUC. My Info. Aquaculture Program Manager USDA APHIS Veterinary Services 4700 River Road, Unit 46 Rm. 4B.02.11 Riverdale, MD 20737 [email protected]. Vet Duties. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Dr. Janet WhaleyVeterinarian for UMCES

IACUC

1

Page 2: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

My Info

• Aquaculture Program ManagerUSDA APHIS Veterinary Services4700 River Road, Unit 46

Rm. 4B.02.11Riverdale, MD [email protected]

2

Page 3: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Vet Duties• UMCES Assurance of Compliance with

the Public Health Service Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals -

• advise on appropriate procedures for use of finfish in research, review research proposals, inspect UMCES facilities, and provide annual training.

• authority to suspend any research found to be in violation of UMCES or PHS policy.

3

Page 4: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Justification

• Research Goals• Non-animal alternatives• Duplication • Research species• Animal use and pain category

4

Page 5: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Pain and Fish

• sensory receptors are present• central reception of sensory input is

unclear• clinical signs of acute and chronic stress

can be observed (cortisol levels, changes in other health and behavior parameters)

• avoid adverse stimuli (reflex manner)

5

Page 6: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Pain Category

• Category 1 little or momentary pain (euthanasia, tagging)

• Category 2 potential pain or discomfort relieved by anesthetic (euthanasia, surgical procedure)

• Category 3 discomfort or pain which is not relieved

6

Page 7: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

STRESS

7

Page 8: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Causes of Stress

• water quality (O2, ammonia, nitrite, pH, other contaminants)

• transportation• netting &

handling • temperature• salinity• water hardness

• poor nutrition• inappropriate

housing conditions• noise• lighting• vibrations• stocking density

8

Page 9: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Stress Response

• Sympathetic nervous system activation

• cortisol• catecholamines• HR, RR• serum osmolality• glucose

• Immunosuppression

( disease resistance)• growth rate• reproduction rate• delayed “capture”

mortality

9

Page 10: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Experimental Procedures

• Experimental design (include statistical methodology for data analysis and determination of number of animals to be used)

• Methods and Materials (describe specifically any handling procedures)

• Methods for anesthesia and euthanasia

10

Page 11: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Anesthesia• Consider for painful/stressful procedures and pre-

euthanasia

• Ice water (transport) - be careful

• Chemical - MS-222, Benzocaine

• Dose is species specific

11

Page 12: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Immersion Anesthesia

12

Page 13: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

MS-222• tricaine methanesulfate, ethyl-m-

animobenzoate methansulfate, Finquel®• CNS depressant• water soluble but acidic (add buffer)• admin. via bath or recirculating system• for anesthesia 50-100 mg/L recommended

(sedation vs surgical)• dose may be species specific - test before

experiment

13

Page 14: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

MS-222 con’t

• induction w/in 3 minutes• recovery w/in 10-15 minutes after removal • is residual +/- could affect chemical analysis of

tissue• no known hazards but wear gloves! • list as chemical hazard in UMCES application

14

Page 15: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Levels of Anesthesia

15

Page 16: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Euthanasia

• +/- pre-sedation with MS-222• decapitation• pithing• chemical (MS-222)• requires experience!!!• avoid direct insertion into fixative (alcohol or

formalin)

16

Page 17: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Husbandry Practices

• Briefly describe housing, feeding, etc. (refer to specific laboratory standard operating procedures)

• Disposition of alive and dead animals

17

Page 18: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Water Quality

18

Page 19: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

The Importance of Good Water Quality

19

Page 20: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

• Investigate mortality in your system

• Basic necropsy• Know your species• Seek advice• Make appropriate

changes

20

Page 21: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Simple DiagnosticsSkin scrape

Fin clip 21

Page 22: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Simple Diagnostics

Gill clip 22

Page 23: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Clinical Diagnostics

Blood collection for analysis 23

Page 24: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Environmental Safety

• infectious agents• chemical hazards (include MS-222)• radioisotopes• biohazards

24

Page 25: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

ZOONOSIS• Zoonosis = disease that can be transmitted

from animals to humans (or other animals)• Anthroponosis = disease that can be

transmitted from humans to animals• High Risk

– immunosupressed (AIDs, other debilitating disease)– pregnant– age

• Exposure (infected water, fish tissue, fish excrement)– dermal contact via skin abrasion, fissure– ingestion

25

Page 26: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Zoonotic Diseases • Potential for disease organisms to spread between

species (fish human)• Bacteria - from handling (mycobacterium,

streptococcus, erysipelothrix, vibrio, norcardia, aeromonas, edwardsiella)

from ingestion (stahylcoccus, clostridium, vibrio, aeromonas, esherichia, salmonella,

edwardsiella)• Parasites - primarily from ingestion (nematodes,

cestodes, trematodes, protozoa).• Toxins - primarily from ingestion (ciguatera,

scombroid, dinoflagellates toxins)26

Page 27: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

PATHOGEN INGESTION OF FISH TISSUE (UNDER COOKED OR FECES CONT.)

INGESTION OF INFECTED AQUARIA WATER

DERMAL CONTACT INFECTED FISH

DERMAL CONTACT INFECTED AQUARIUM/SEA WATER

BACTERIA Streptococcus * Staphylococcus * Clostridium + Erysipelothrix + Mycobacterium * + Nocardia * * Vibrio + + P. shigelloides + +

Aeromonas + + Pseudomonas * * Escherichia + Salmonella + Klebsiella + Edwardsiella + + + + Leptospirosis ? ? ? ? PARASITES Anasakiasis + Eustrongyloides + Cestodes + Trematodes + Protozoa * * VIRUSES Calicivirus * FUNGI Candida * TOXINS Ciguatera Poisoning

+ heat and cold stable

Scombroid Poisoning

+ cold sensitive

+ reported cases in humans * no known cases in humans but the potential risk exists ? exposure route of reported human disease unknown

27

Page 28: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Mycobacteria

28

Page 29: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

PREVENTION• Fish

• Know health of your fish• Proper husbandry/aquaculture• Minimum - wear gloves when handling

• All Wildlife• Know the hazards • Take all necessary “known”precautions• DO YOUR HOMEWORK!!!

29

Page 30: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

References• Can Fish Suffer?: perspectives on sentience,

pain, fear and stress; K.P. Chandroo et al./Applied Animal Behaviour Science 86 (2004) 225-250

• Fish Cognition and Behavior; Culum Brown et al.; Blackwell Publishing (2006) ISBN: 9781405134293

• Fish Medicine; Michael Stoskopf, W.B. Saunders Company; 1st edition (January 15, 1993) ISBN: 0721626297

30