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 | | From: | pearl | | Subject: | Lab Experiments 'Terrifying' For Animals | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 14:12:22 -0000 |
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 | Lab Experiments 'Terrifying' For Animals Special to World Science 1-22-5
The most harmless-seeming lab experiments spark panic in the creatures going through them, according to a new report. But supporters of animal medical research, who say the work saves lives, questioned the findings.
The report, based on a review of past scientific studies, claims that mice, rabbits, rats, beagles, geese, and other animals all show measurable levels of stress in response to routine laboratory procedures.
These procedures, including blood draws and use of stomach tubes, are "terrifying" for animals, according to a press release announcing the findings. The statement was issued by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit group.
Jonathan Balcombe, a research consultant for the group, authored the report finding that physiological stress levels go up among animals undergoing experiments.
Even simple contact with laboratory workers is scary for animals, said Balcombe. "There is no such thing as a humane animal experiment," he said in the statement. "Fear or panic ensues when the animal is touched or stuck with a needle."
Balcombe isn't new to the longstanding debate over whether it is right to use animals in scientific research. He has argued against the use of vivisection, the act of operating on live animals. "Vivisection labs cause animals pain, misery and death, and should be actively opposed," though not by violence, as some say, he wrote in an April 29, 2004 letter to the Times of London.
But the new findings, according to the committee, are the first time such misery has been shown to befall animals during procedures that have until now been seen as relatively benign.
Balcombe's full findings are published in the Autumn 2004 issue of the research journal Contemporary Topics in Laboratory Animal Science. The findings are based on an extensive review of the scientific literature by Balcombe, an ethologist, or scientist who studies animal behavior.
A mouse who is picked up and briefly held experiences several physiological reactions, according to the group: As stress-response hormones flood the bloodstream, the mouse exhibits a racing pulse and a spike in blood pressure. These symptoms can persist for up to an hour after each event. Immune response is also affected.
"In rats and mice, the growth of tumors is strongly influenced by how much the animals are handled," the group's statement said.
Supporters of medical research that uses animals said they don't have much faith in Balcombe's study. "I would be very skeptical of anything that comes out of" Balcombe's group, since it is also already on record as being anti-vivisection, said Barbara Davies, communications director for RDS, a British organization of scientists who support medical research.
Barbara Rich, a spokeswoman for Americans for Medical Progress, an Alexandria, Virginia-based group, echoed that. "It may be that they came to the conclusion before they did the study," she warned. Balcombe's group is closely allied with the radical animal-rights group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, she added.
On the other hand, Rich acknowledged, the journal that published the paper is reputable. She said more scientists will have to assess it, especially as it seems to contain some strange conclusions. "One person said to me, 'if handling animals causes tumors, what does this say about our pets?'"
Balcombe dismissed that objection. "The difference between my pet rats and a rat in a laboratory is my pet rats don't ever get stuck with needles, have blood drawn or get force-fed a drug," he said. Lab animals learn to expect bad things, and their fear of handling stems from that, he added; this isn't the case with pets.
The journal's editors also expressed reservations about the paper. In an editorial in the same issue of the journal, they wrote that the paper is an "opinion piece. The literature discussed... is selective in scope and does not include a rigorous review of current methods and studies concerned with detecting or observing effects of stress in laboratory animals. We caution that it is not correct to conclude that stress is equivalent to distress or fear."
Balcombe objected to the portrayal of his study as selective. He said his review of scientific literature included all past papers that he could find meeting certain clear criteria. None that met these conditions was excluded, he asserted: any study was included if it examined animals' stress responses to handling and routine experimental procedures.
Balcombe also called the editorial itself highly unusual for a research journal -- evidence of how controversial the subject of animal research is. "One would have to look far and wide among journals to find an editorial disparaging of the research" published in the same journal, he observed.
Moreover, Balcombe wrote that while it can be argued that stress and fear are different, evidence shows that in this case, stress does correspond to fear. One clue is the fact that animals try to avoid most of these laboratory procedures, he explained.
The paper focused on three routine procedures: handling, blood collection and force-feeding. Independent of the invasive experiments themselves, these daily routines can cause an animal to experience elevated bloodstream concentrations of substances known to indicate stress: corticosterone, prolactin, glucose, and epinephrine, Balcombe wrote. Impaired immune response has also been recorded in animals after anxiety-producing contact with lab personnel, according to the study.
Balcombe argued that scared animals don't produce sound scientific findings because their fear leads to distorted experimental results.
"Research on tumor development, immune function, endocrine [hormonal] and cardiovascular disorders, neoplasms [tumors], developmental defects, and psychological phenomena are particularly vulnerable to data being contaminated by animals' stress effects," said Balcombe.
http://members.aol.com/mlucen/041229_animalexpts.htm
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 | | From: | dh_ld at nomail.com | | Subject: | Re: Lab Experiments 'Terrifying' For Animals | | Date: | Sun, 23 Jan 2005 20:38:09 GMT |
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 | On Sun, 23 Jan 2005 14:12:22 -0000, "pearl" wrote:
>Lab Experiments 'Terrifying' For Animals >Special to World Science >1-22-5 > >The most harmless-seeming lab experiments spark panic in the creatures >going through them, according to a new report. But supporters of animal >medical research, who say the work saves lives,
I'm sure it does.
[...] >A mouse who is picked up and briefly held experiences several >physiological reactions, according to the group: As stress-response >hormones flood the bloodstream, the mouse exhibits a racing pulse >and a spike in blood pressure.
When I used to have some rats and mice, we would discuss how it must feel to be picked up by a human. The experience would be much more intense than riding a ferris wheel, and there would probably be no sense of security or confidence in not being dropped. If there's an "ARA" involved, no doubt there is dishonesty of some type involved here, but also there's not much doubt that animals are afraid of being picked up and stuck with needles or force fed. Do they use mouse size needles? Or do they use something that would scare the hell out of any human? _________________________________________________________ If scientists could replace animal research and testing with methods which did not need to use animals then they would.
There are several reasons for this:
* Scientists do not like or want to use animals in research. Like the vast majority of people they do not want to see animals suffer unnecessarily. In fact less than 10% of biomedical research uses animals. Unfortunately for much of the work involved in biomedical research there are as yet no working alternative techniques that would allow us to stop using animals.
* Biomedical research is producing thousands of new compounds, which may have potential as new drugs. It is much more efficient to screen these compounds using rapid non-animal techniques to test their effectiveness and toxicity.
* The very high standards of animal welfare and care required of British research establishments are a contributory factor in making animal research very expensive. If scientists can develop alternatives to using animals it will allow them to divert their limited research funds to other areas of research. [...] http://www.bret.org.uk/noan.htm ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ _________________________________________________________ [...] From the bald eagle to the red wolf, biomedical research has helped bring many species back from the brink of extinction. Conservation and captive breeding programs, often using fertilization techniques developed for humans, have made it possible for these animals to be reintroduced into the wild, and today their numbers are growing. Biologists and wildlife veterinarians rely on the latest research in reproduction, nutrition, toxicology and medicine to build a better future for our wild animals.
In vitro fertilization, sperm banks and artificial insemination were all developed to help human couples, but today they also are regularly used to ensure the survival of endangered species. [...]
http://fbresearch.org/helpingwildlife.html ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ _________________________________________________________ WITHOUT ANIMAL RESEARCH:
Polio would kill or cripple thousands of unvaccinated children and adults this year.
Most of the nation's one million insulin-dependent diabetics wouldn't be insulin dependent -- they would be dead.
60 million Americans would risk death from heart attack, stroke or kidney failure from lack of medication to control their high blood pressure.
Doctors would have no chemotherapy to save the 70% of children who now survive acute lymphocytic leukemia.
More than one million Americans would lose vision in at least one eye this year because cataract surgery would be impossible.
Hundreds of thousands of people disabled by strokes or by head or spinal cord injuries would not benefit from rehabilitation techniques.
The more than 100,000 people with arthritis who each year receive hip replacements would walk only with great pain and difficulty or be confined to wheelchairs.
7,500 newborns who contract jaundice each year would develop cerebral palsy, now preventable through phototherapy.
There would be no kidney dialysis to extend the lives of thousands of patients with end-stage renal disease.
Surgery of any type would be a painful, rare procedure without the development of modern anesthesia allowing artificially induced unconsciousness or local or general insensitivity to pain.
Instead of being eradicated, smallpox would continue unchecked and many others would join the two million people already killed by the disease.
Millions of dogs, cats, and other pets and farm animals would have died from anthrax, distemper, canine parvovirus, feline leukemia, rabies and more than 200 other diseases now preventable thanks to animal research.
http://www.ampef.org/research.htm ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ
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 | | From: | Sbharris[atsign]ix.netcom.com | | Subject: | Re: Lab Experiments 'Terrifying' For Animals | | Date: | 23 Jan 2005 21:06:22 -0800 |
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 | >>On the other hand, Rich acknowledged, the journal that published the paper is reputable. She said more scientists will have to assess it, especially as it seems to contain some strange conclusions. "One person said to me, 'if handling animals causes tumors, what does this say about our pets?'"
Balcombe dismissed that objection. he said. Lab animals learn to expect bad things, and their fear of handling stems from that, he added; this isn't the case with pets.<<
COMMENT:
We're hearing a certain amount of fuzzy thinking and B.S. from both sides here. There's truth here, but it's somewhere in the middle. As a physician and biomedical researcher who's published scientific work using both rodent and dog models, let me put my two cents in.
First of all, Balcombe's objection is disingenuous because he's talking about rodents, which may be the only lab animals he thinks about. "The difference between my pet rats and a rat in a laboratory is my pet rats don't ever get stuck with needles, have blood drawn or get force-fed a drug," Yeah, that may be true, but what about Balcombe's pet cats and dogs? How does he get his cats tested for FeLV and FIV if they don't get poked with needles to draw blood? How do his animals get vaccinated? Does he not neuter or spay his pets? How does that go?
The truth is that any pet animal which has had many invasive procedures at a vet will exhibit the very same stress responses as we're talking about, as soon as it gets a whiff of the office smell on the 3rd or 4th or 10th visit. If you own a pet, you've seen that. All the issues brought up with animal research also occur in veterinary practice, and in human practice too, particularly in pediatric oncology and anesthesia. There are ways to deal with all of them.
One of the ways is simple desensitization, or exposure therapy. To do this, you simply do a lot of handling of the animals in situations where they're not hurt. At my institution the dogs (which are all bred in-house) are only semi-socialized, but they're exposed to humans every day when they're sent to the exercise yard, and even more intimately when they are brought into the clinical space for monthly health exams and checkups. All this makes them quite handle-able.
The second way you can deal with anxiety in animals is pre-medicate it away. All dogs at my institution get acepromazine before being taken out of their housing for invasive procedures, and after that, more tranquilizers in scaled fashion (ketamine/valium, or even if necessary propofol/gas full anesthesia) when they need it. And also pre and post procedure narcotics for pain. The result of all of this is that these animals are no more anxious after many minor invasive procedures than they are before the first one. Apparently, they have no memory, as your pets do of the vet's office. As illustration, we work with 60 lb animals with all their teeth, but never use muzzles, nor ever need to.
Rodents are at risk to be mistreated. One of the difficulties is their size-- they are so easy to control by hand using neck/back scruff techniques, that often they can be handled without fear of bite, even without medication. Researchers therefore often omit the medication. This is probably not a good thing, and from the humanitarian point of view there's just as much justification for premedicating rats and mice for major invasive procedures (ie those that are more invasive than the premedication shot), as there is for cats or dogs. A similar thing happens with husbandry and routine human contact. Rats and mice don't need to be exercised in separate facilities, so they usually aren't. That leaves them to be left alone entirely. Nor are they often handled by hand except when being invaded. This also is a mistake. As anybody who has owned a pet rat or mouse can tell you, rodents also can be semi-socialized with a little bit of handling and human contact.
The rodent stress problem is partly just bad luck for rodents due to their small size, easy care, relative lack of "cuteness," easy controllability, and cheapness. Some of the blame for the mistreatment of rodents rests on researchers, who can be lazy, and may well not have the empathic connection for rodents that they naturally do for more common companion animals like dogs and cats. But the rest of the story is that some of the blame for the mistreatment of rodents rests on PETA and the animal rights activists, who have managed to get federal law to place non rodent mammal research under a set of very onerous and expensive USDA restrictions which are far worse than apply to the food industry, or to pet owners. With the result that most non-rodent research has disappeared, because it's been priced out of the market due to the artificial PETA-generated expenses. In turn, loss of large animal experience with its necessity for premedication and desensitization-handing that it brings as a habit, has given us more generations of researchers who simply don't have those habits. When these researchers get hold of rodents, they tend to mistreat them because they don't know any other way.
Putting it in other words, research which runs on only rodent experience is bound to run into problems if inadequate prevention of suffering and stress. Large animals teach stress management by experience and direct observation. Panicked and stressed dogs put their tails between their legs, urinate, and make piteous facial expressions. Cats in similar situations yowl and hiss. Pigs may squeal almost ultrasonically, and at astonishing intensity. Cats, dogs, and pigs all can produce vicious bites. Rabbits may simply collapse and die. All these things provoke automatic responses in researchers to see that stress and fear are reduced. But the researcher who, unlike the veterinarian, has no set of reflexes for dealing with a wide spectrum of animal handling, and who thinks of rodents as wild squirmy animals which are naturally panicked anyway, is less likely to do anything about it. In fact, a certain amount of "rodent-bigotry" is one reason why rodent-research has so far successfully resisted being put under USDA control (of course there are also other reasons involving logistics).
The large scale research move to "rodents-only" has not only been bad for rodents, but bad for science. One of the problems is that stress in mishandled rodents may indeed result in scattered and poor data, particularly in research which involves the immune system (the hormone corticosterone, generated in large amounts in rodents during stress, is immunosuppressive in a similar way to cortisol in humans). This can be avoided with proper handling (as some of my own research in mice demonstrates). But a far worse problem is that the loss of non-rodent animal models in science has meant the loss of a large number of models which are far more appropriate to human problems than anything possible in rodents. To pick two examples: there is a growing amount of blood lipid and diet "research" in rats, even though rats are extremely resistant to atherosclerosis. This research is more and more replacing the older research in a more appropriate rabbit model, largely because rabbits are now under USDA inspection control, and as a result have become very expensive to house and use in research (far more expensive than housing rabbits bred for food!). In a field I'm familiar with, liquid ventilation research, a great deal of time and money has been wasted using rats, which model humans very poorly due to far faster metabolisms and CO2 productions, and tiny lungs which behave very differently from those of man. By contrast, the larger breed corsairial canine, which is a far better model for human lung research, has nearly been banished from the field. (But try doing a stethoscope exam on a *rat* with chemical asthma.)
I don't have much hope for the future. We need animals for research, but the "animal advocates," who have long argued that animals are poor models for humans, have succeeded in getting ridiculously expensive laws passed which have destroyed many animal research models, and thus made their own arguments partially self-fulfilling. (I wonder if that wasn't their real purpose). True enough, large animals are now better protected from mistreatment by researchers than in the past---- but the huge overkill and hypocrisy in these laws (which, as again as noted, apply to research animal housing, for example, but not food-animal housing) has made large animal research rare. Therefore, what social good did it do to protect large animals in research, if that made the research too expensive to do at all? The point was supposedly actually to do some research, not just outlaw it by the back door. The win-win situation that makes for good politics didn't happen in this field. As a result, trust has disappeared and science has now drawn the line at extending similar laws to rodent husbandry and handling. And now the huge irony: because of the intrinsic vulnerability of rodents to abuse by researchers, probably rodents need the oversight of at least veterinary pain and stress management more than any other research species, and they always have. And yet, as of now, due to the animal research wars, rodents are probably farther away from getting it than they ever have been. Go figure.
SBH
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