The treatment of iron poisoning has typically not included the administration of activated charcoal due to the lack of evidence supporting its efficacy. Several in vitro studies have demonstrated good adsorption of iron in a variety of pH ranges that were comparable to those found with other drugs for which activated charcoal is clinically used. This study was designed to determine whether activated charcoal altered the gastrointestinal absorption of toxic doses of iron as ferrous sulfate in an in vivo model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChronic venous cannulation in mice is an acceptable and useful technique for repeated blood sampling or continuous intravenous administration of substances, for which mild restraint of the animal may be necessary. Because chronic restraint has drawn considerable attention in the animal welfare community, the purpose of this study was to evaluate physiologic indices of stress in mice restrained by using an established tail restraint method. Serum corticosterone levels and body, thymus, adrenal, and spleen weights on days 2, 5, 8, and 12 were compared between tail-restrained and unrestrained mice.
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