care and use of vertebrate animals

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

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Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals. Dr. Janet Whaley Veterinarian for UMCES IACUC. My Info. National Marine Fisheries Service Office of Protected Resource (F/PR2) 1315 East-West Highway Silver Spring, MD 20910 p. (301) 713-2322 ext. 170 [email protected]. Vet Duties. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Care and Use of Vertebrate Care and Use of Vertebrate AnimalsAnimals

Dr. Janet WhaleyDr. Janet WhaleyVeterinarian for UMCESVeterinarian for UMCES

IACUCIACUC

Page 2: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

My InfoMy Info

National Marine Fisheries ServiceOffice of Protected Resource (F/PR2)1315 East-West HighwaySilver Spring, MD 20910p. (301) 713-2322 ext. [email protected]

Page 3: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Vet DutiesVet 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.

Page 4: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

JustificationJustification

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

Page 5: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Pain and FishPain 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)

Page 6: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Pain CategoryPain 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

Page 7: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

STRESSSTRESS

Page 8: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Causes of StressCauses 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

Page 9: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Stress ResponseStress Response

Sympathetic nervous system activation

cortisol catecholamines HR, RR serum osmolality glucose

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

mortality

Page 10: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Experimental ProceduresExperimental 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

Page 11: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

AnesthesiaAnesthesia• Consider for painful/stressful procedures and pre-

euthanasia

• Ice water (transport) - be careful

• Chemical - MS-222, Benzocaine

• Dose is species specific

Page 12: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Immersion AnesthesiaImmersion Anesthesia

Page 13: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

MS-222MS-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

Page 14: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

MS-222 con’tMS-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

Page 15: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Levels of Anesthesia

Page 16: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

EuthanasiaEuthanasia

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

formalin)

Page 17: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Husbandry PracticesHusbandry Practices

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

• Disposition of alive and dead animals

Page 18: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Water QualityWater Quality

Page 19: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

The Importance of The Importance of Good Water QualityGood Water Quality

Page 20: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

• Investigate mortality in your system

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

changes

Page 21: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Simple DiagnosticsSimple DiagnosticsSkin scrape

Fin clip

Page 22: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Simple DiagnosticsSimple Diagnostics

Gill clip

Page 23: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Clinical Diagnostics

Blood collection for analysis

Page 24: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Environmental SafetyEnvironmental Safety

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

Page 25: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

ZOONOSISZOONOSIS• 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

Page 26: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Zoonotic DiseasesZoonotic 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)

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

Page 28: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

Mycobacteria

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!!!

Page 30: Care and Use of Vertebrate Animals

ReferencesReferences• 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