Oral self-administration of buprenorphine in the diet for analgesia in mice

Author:

Molina-Cimadevila M J1,Segura S1,Merino C1,Ruiz-Reig N1,Andrés B1,de Madaria E2

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Neurociencias de Alicante, Universidad Miguel Hernández–Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Alicante, Sapin

2. Sección de Aparato Digestivo, Hospital General Universitario de Alicante, Alicante, Spain

Abstract

Postsurgical oral self-administration of analgesics in rodents is an interesting technique of providing analgesia, avoiding the negative effects of manipulation. Several strategies, using gelatin or nutella, have already been described. However, rodents require some habituation period to reach a good intake because of their neophobic behavior. The current study aimed to explore whether buprenorphine when mixed with an extruded diet offers a potential treatment option in the pain management of mice using a triple approach: by measuring the spontaneous intake in healthy animals; by using the hot-plate test; and finally by assessing the drug’s ability to provide postoperative analgesia in a surgical intervention of moderate severity (intra-utero electroporation). Mice consumed during 20 hours, similar amounts of extruded diet alone, mixed with glucosaline, and mixed with buprenorphine (0.03 mg per pellet) or meloxicam (0.25 mg per pellet) both of which were diluted in glucosaline, showing that no neophobia was associated with these administrations. Relative increase from baseline latency (% maximal possible effect) in the hot-plate test at 20 h of administration was significantly higher for oral buprenorphine in diet 0.03 mg/pellet, and diet 0.15 mg/pellet, compared with placebo and no differences were found between those oral administrations and subcutaneous buprenorphine 0.1 mg/kg measured 3 h later. The treatment was also effective in attenuating the reductions in food consumption and body weight that occur after surgery. These data suggest that providing buprenorphine with the diet is a feasible and effective way of self-administration of analgesia in mice and does not cause neophobia and may easily contribute to the refinement of surgical procedures.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

Cited by 27 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Ranking bovine pain-related behaviors using a logistic regression algorithm;Applied Animal Behaviour Science;2024-02

2. Clinical efficacy of buprenorphine after oral dosing in rats undergoing major surgery;Laboratory Animals;2023-09-05

3. Use of a Low-calorie Flavored Gel to Facilitate Oral Self-administration of Analgesics in Mice;Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science;2023-03-01

4. References;Laboratory Animal Anaesthesia and Analgesia;2023

5. Analgesia and postoperative care;Laboratory Animal Anaesthesia and Analgesia;2023

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