Intravenous chloralose is a safe anesthetic for longitudinal use in beagle puppies

Chloralose is an intravenous anesthetic which preserves vagal and central baroreceptor reflexes, thus rendering it useful for physiologic research. However, chloralose is recommended for terminal experiments only, due to concerns relating to long-term toxicity. We investigated the safety of chloralo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inLaboratory animal science (Chicago) Vol. 38; no. 4; p. 422
Main Authors Grad, R, Witten, M L, Quan, S F, McKelvie, D H, Lemen, R J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.08.1988
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Summary:Chloralose is an intravenous anesthetic which preserves vagal and central baroreceptor reflexes, thus rendering it useful for physiologic research. However, chloralose is recommended for terminal experiments only, due to concerns relating to long-term toxicity. We investigated the safety of chloralose in longitudinal pulmonary function studies in beagle puppies. Twelve puppies received chloralose anesthesia repeatedly (8-12 times per dog) between the ages of 80 and 300 days. Constant anesthetic depth was maintained reliably throughout the course of the experiments. Recovery lasted approximately 4 hours in each experiment and occurred in four definable stages. Following recovery, the puppies exhibited normal health and growth as compared with other colony animals. There was no biochemical evidence of acute renal, hepatic, pancreatic or cardiac toxicity prior to and immediately after anesthesia, and no evidence of chronic toxicity following completion of the study protocol, after a total cumulative dose of 1.18 g/kg chloralose. These studies demonstrate that intravenous chloralose is a safe anesthetic for longitudinal use.
Bibliography:L74
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ISSN:0023-6764