PERSONAL DE APOYO
NEMIROVSKY Sergio Ivan
artículos
Título:
Use of subcutaneous transponders to monitor body temperature in laboratory rats
Autor/es:
PATO, ALEJANDRO M.; ROMERO, DELFINA M.; SOSA HOLT, CARLA S.; NEMIROVSKY, SERGIO I.; WOLANSKY, MARCELO J.
Revista:
JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGICAL AND TOXICOLOGICAL METHODS.
Editorial:
ELSEVIER
Referencias:
Año: 2022 vol. 114
ISSN:
1056-8719
Resumen:
Implantable radiofrequency transponders may be adequate for the characterization of hazardous chemicals targeting body temperature control in experimental animals when colonic probes and automated monitoring systems based on intraperitoneal transmitters are not available, installable or applicable for any reason. In this work, we summarize a series of experiments showing the implantation protocol and utility of rice-grain size transponders to monitor subcutaneous temperature (Tsc) after exposure to pharmacological or toxicological treatments targeting body temperature control in laboratory rats. In addition, to explore the responsiveness of this thermometric system, the influence of physiological activity on Tsc readings was examined by monitoring Tsc after a motor exercise in a RotaRod system. Moreover, we characterized the effects of acute oral administration of the pyrethroid insecticide permethrin (PRM) in corn oil (1 mL/kg) on Tsc. PRM has been previously reported to cause dose-related increases in core temperature after administering oral doses ≥75 mg/kg, with peak effects at 2–4 h in adult rats. We monitored Tsc at 30 min intervals over a 4 h period after exposure to PRM (40–160 mg/kg). PRM caused a moderate increase in Tsc starting at ~3.5 h. Overall, Tsc assays showed minimal animal stress (if any) and rapid animal recovery from transponder implantation, simplicity to collect data, convenient testing room space requirements, and a competitive global cost per animal examined. However, various experimental factors may greatly influence the variability within and between individuals, some of which can be controlled by carefully setting up experimental conditions.