Efficacy and safety of 5 anesthetics in adult zebrafish (Danio rerio).

J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci

Tri-Institutional Training Program in Laboratory Animal Medicine and Science, The Rockefeller University, Weill Cornell Medical College, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York, USA.

Published: March 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study compared the anesthetic effects of various agents (gradual cooling, lidocaine, metomidate, isoflurane) to MS222 on adult zebrafish, assessing factors like recovery time and mortality rates.
  • Results showed that while MS222 and lidocaine were effective for surgical anesthesia, isoflurane and high-dose lidocaine led to high mortality, indicating they are unsuitable as sole anesthetics.
  • Behavioral tests post-anesthesia revealed no significant anxiety-like changes in fish regardless of which anesthetic was used, with gradual cooling being more appropriate for short, non-painful procedures.

Article Abstract

Although the safety and efficacy of tricaine methanesulfonate (MS222) for anesthesia of fish are well established, other anesthetics used less commonly in fish have been less extensively evaluated. Therefore, we compared gradual cooling, lidocaine hydrochloride (300, 325, and 350 mg/L), metomidate hydrochloride (2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 mg/L), and isoflurane (0.5 mL/L) with MS222 (150 mg/L) for anesthesia of adult zebrafish. The efficacy and safety of each agent was evaluated by observing loss of equilibrium, slowing of opercular movement, response to tail-fin pinch, recovery time, and anesthesia-associated mortality rates. At 15 min after anesthetic recovery, we used a novel-tank test to evaluate whether anesthetic exposure influenced short-term anxiety-like behavior. Behavioral parameters measured included latency to enter and number of transitions to the upper half of the tank, number of erratic movements, and number of freezing bouts. Behavior after anesthesia was unaltered regardless of the anesthetic used. Efficacy and safety differed among the anesthetics evaluated. Gradual cooling was useful for short procedures requiring immobilization only, but all instrumentation and surfaces that come in contact with fish must be maintained at approximately 10 °C. MS222 and lidocaine hydrochloride at 325 mg/L were effective as anesthetic agents for surgical procedures in adult zebrafish, but isoflurane and high-dose lidocaine hydrochloride were unsuitable as sole anesthetic agents due to high (30%) mortality rates. Although MS222 remains the best choice for generating a surgical plane of anesthe- sia, metomidate hydrochloride and gradual cooling were useful for sedation and immobilization for nonpainful procedures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3966278PMC

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