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A Comparison of the Efficacy and Cardiopulmonary Effects of 3 Different Sedation Protocols in Otolemur garnettii


AUTHORS

Finnie KR , Jones CP , Dupont WD , Salleng KJ , Shuster KA , . Journal of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science : JAALAS. 2020 7 21; ().

ABSTRACT

The Northern greater galago (Otolemur garnettii) is a prosimian primate most commonly used to study the evolutionary development of vision and somatosensation. This study aimed to investigate the efficacy and cardiopulmonary effects of 3 sedation protocols commonly used in other primate species: 1) alfaxalone (Alf; 8 mg/kg IM) 2) ketamine alone (Ket; 20 mg/kg IM) and 3) ketamine + dexmedetomidine (Ket+Dex; 4 mg/kg + 25 μg/kg IM) with reversal (atipamezole; 250 μg/kg IM). A total of 34 animals were evaluated, including 11 juveniles and 23 adults. Cardiopulmonary parameters such as indirectblood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, and SpO2 were measured, and blood was collected for blood gas analysis and a chemistry panel. To examine the efficacy of each sedation protocol, induction time, immobilization time, and recovery time were recorded. Subjective measures of quality and efficacy included quality of induction, pedal withdrawal reflex, palpebral reflex, muscle tension, rectal temperature, and quality of recovery. All 3 protocols successfully immobilized the animals and all animals recovered from sedation. Heart rates were highest among the Ket group and the lowest for the Ket+Dex group. On average, the Alf group was immobilized for twice as long as either the Ket or Ket+Dex groups. The Ket+Dex group had the fastest average recovery time and subjectively had the best quality of recovery. Based on these results, Ket+Dex is recommended over Alf or Ket alone for brief sedation of healthy galagos.



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