Simultaneous subcutaneous implantation of two osmotic minipumps connected to a jugular vein catheter in the rat

Author:

Wedel Johannes1,Weij Michel2,Oosten Annemieke Smit-van2,Hillebrands Jan-Luuk1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology & Medical Biology, Pathology Section, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands

2. Central Animal Facility, University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands

Abstract

Subcutaneous osmotic pump implantation connected to a venous catheter is a well-established method for delivering compounds intravenously for an intermediate duration (approximately two weeks). When prolonged release is desired (approximately four weeks) reduced flow rate is needed with a similar pump volume. With a fixed intra-pump compound concentration, reduced flow rate results in unwanted reduced bioavailability of the compound. Prolonged intravenous delivery would therefore need a pump replacement, resulting in increased discomfort and confounding effects on experimental outcome. To overcome this, we describe a method to double the compound infusion rate for four weeks by implanting two low-flow rate osmotic pumps (2.5 µL/h for 28 days) connected to a jugular vein catheter in a single rat. Rats implanted with a single high-flow rate pump (5 µL/h for 14 days) served as controls. Double pump-implanted rats displayed similar post-operative weight gain and physical activity indicating similar levels of discomfort when compared with single pump-implanted rats. Double pump-implanted rats had an increased risk of pump-related complications (four delivery failures [double pump] versus one delivery failure [single pump]). Our data show that double pump implantation is a feasible alternative to changing pumps or the use of extracorporeal pump systems connected via a long wire to partly restrained animals.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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