Behavior of Piglets in an Observation Arena before and after Surgical Castration with Local Anesthesia

Author:

Miller Regina1ORCID,Grott Andrea1,Patzkéwitsch Dorian1,Döring Dorothea1,Abendschön Nora2,Deffner Pauline2ORCID,Reiser Judith3,Ritzmann Mathias2,Saller Anna M.3ORCID,Schmidt Paul4ORCID,Senf Steffanie2ORCID,Werner Julia3ORCID,Baumgartner Christine3,Zöls Susanne2,Erhard Michael1ORCID,Bergmann Shana1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Veterinary Science, Chair of Animal Welfare, Ethology, Animal Hygiene and Animal Husbandry, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, LMU Munich, 80539 Munich, Germany

2. Clinic for Swine, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, 85764 Oberschleißheim, Germany

3. Center for Preclinical Research, Technical University of Munich, 81675 Munich, Germany

4. Statistical Consulting for Science and Research, Große Seestr. 8, 13086 Berlin, Germany

Abstract

Surgical castration of piglets is generally recognized as a painful procedure, but there is currently no gold standard for the assessment of pain behavior in piglets. However, pain assessment is essential for evaluating the effectiveness of local anesthetics. In this study, we investigated the efficacy of four local anesthetics in terms of pain relief during and after surgical castration in three sequential study parts. To do so, we filmed 178 piglets before the applied procedures, after injection of the local anesthetic, and up to 24 h after castration (five observation times in total) in an observation arena and compared their behavior before and after castration and between treatments and control groups. The results showed significant differences in the behavior of the piglets before and after castration and between the sham-castrated control group and the control group castrated without anesthesia. The different local anesthesia treatment groups showed diverging differences to the control groups. The most frequently shown pain-associated behaviors of the piglets were changes in tail position and hunched back posture. We observed a reduction but no complete elimination of the expressed pain-associated behaviors after local anesthesia. Several behavioral changes—such as changes in tail position, hunched back posture or tail wagging—persisted until the day after castration. Owing to the limited duration of the effects of the local anesthetics, local anesthesia did not influence long-term pain.

Funder

German Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture

Federal Office for Agriculture and Food

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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