Department of Paediatrics and Child Health, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Centre for Translational Physiology, University of Otago, Wellington, New Zealand.
Pharmacol Res Perspect. 2021 Feb;9(1):e00713. doi: 10.1002/prp2.713.
Anesthesia is frequently used to facilitate physiological monitoring during interventional animal studies. However, its use may induce cardiovascular (central and peripheral), respiratory, and thermoregulatory depression, confounding results in anesthetized animals. Despite the wide utility of guinea pigs as a translational platform, anesthetic protocols remain unstandardized for extended physiological studies in this species. Therefore, optimizing an anesthetic protocol that balances stable anesthesia with intact cardiorespiratory and metabolic function is crucial. To achieve this, 12 age and sex-matched juvenile Dunkin Hartley guinea pigs underwent extended anesthesia (≤150 min) with either (a) isoflurane (ISO: 1.5%), or (b) isoflurane + N O (ISO+ N O: 0.8% +70%), in this randomized cross-over designed study. Cardiovascular (HR, SBP, peripheral microvascular blood flow), respiratory (respiratory rate, SpO ), and thermal (T and T ) measures were recorded continuously throughout anesthesia. Blood gas measures pre- and post- anesthesia were performed. Incorporation of 70% N O allowed for significant reductions in isoflurane (to 0.8%) while maintaining an effective anesthetic depth for prolonged noninvasive physiological examination in guinea pigs. ISO+N O maintained heart rate, peripheral blood flow, respiratory rate, and thermoregulatory function at levels closest to those of conscious animals, especially in females; however, it did not fully rescue anesthesia-induced hypotension. These results suggest that for studies requiring prolonged physiological examination (≤150 min) in guinea pigs, 0.8% isoflurane with a 70% N O adjuvant provides adequate anesthesia, while minimizing associated cardiorespiratory depression. The preservation of cardiorespiratory status is most marked throughout the first hour of anesthesia.
麻醉常用于促进介入性动物研究中的生理监测。然而,它的使用可能会导致心血管(中枢和外周)、呼吸和体温调节抑制,从而影响麻醉动物的研究结果。尽管豚鼠作为一种转化平台被广泛应用,但在这种物种中,用于延长生理研究的麻醉方案仍未标准化。因此,优化一种平衡稳定麻醉与完整心肺和代谢功能的麻醉方案至关重要。为了实现这一目标,12 只年龄和性别匹配的幼年 Dunkin Hartley 豚鼠在本随机交叉设计研究中接受了长达 150 分钟的延长麻醉,使用的麻醉剂分别为(a)异氟烷(ISO:1.5%)或(b)异氟烷+一氧化氮(ISO+NO:0.8%+70%)。心血管(心率、收缩压、外周微血管血流)、呼吸(呼吸频率、SpO2)和体温(T 和 T)测量在整个麻醉过程中连续记录。在麻醉前和麻醉后进行血气测量。一氧化氮的 70%掺入允许异氟烷(降至 0.8%)显著减少,同时保持豚鼠长时间非侵入性生理检查的有效麻醉深度。ISO+NO 维持心率、外周血流量、呼吸率和体温调节功能接近清醒动物的水平,尤其是雌性;然而,它并未完全挽救麻醉引起的低血压。这些结果表明,对于需要在豚鼠中进行延长生理检查(≤150 分钟)的研究,0.8%异氟烷加 70%一氧化氮佐剂可提供足够的麻醉效果,同时最大限度地减少相关的心肺抑制。心肺状态的保存在麻醉的前 1 小时最为明显。