4.4 Article

Effects of Different Anesthetics in the Murine Model of EHV-1 Infection

Journal

VETERINARY PATHOLOGY
Volume 50, Issue 5, Pages 849-856

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0300985813476062

Keywords

anesthetics; apoptosis; Equid Herpesvirus 1; immunohistochemistry; mice; proliferation

Funding

  1. FONCyT [PICT 2011-1163]
  2. CIC PBA
  3. Department for Science and Technology of the National University of La Plata (SeCyt)
  4. National Academy of Agronomy and Veterinary (ANAV)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Mice are commonly used as an experimental model to investigate the Equid herpesvirus 1 (EHV-1) infection. This model easily reproduces the disease, and the clinical signs are more or less similar to those observed in the horse, the natural host. During natural infection, the acute course of respiratory infection is mandatory for the development of adaptive immune response. Since interactions between EHV-1 and anesthetics are possible, the study investigated whether the early events of murine pulmonary immune response could be affected by different anesthetics. Therefore, mice were experimentally infected with a unique EHV-1 strain under the effects of ether, ketamine/xylazine, or isoflurane. Clinical signs and histopathological lesions in the lungs were described, and the cell death and proliferation rates of sham-inoculated or infected animals were quantified using immunohistochemistry. Clinical signs were more severe in animals anesthetized with ether. Qualitative differences in the recruited inflammatory cells were observed following application of anesthesia. The level of infection between the infected groups was not statistically significant. However, lungs from ketamine/xylazine-anesthetized animals showed the highest cell death rates, whereas those from isoflurane-anesthetized animals showed the highest proliferation rates. It has been emphasized that anesthetics alone or their interactions with EHV-1 modify the response against the infection. An appropriate selection of the anesthetic during experimental studies is relevant to minimize wrong conclusions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available