1. Corneal lesions related to an anesthetic mixture of medetomidine, midazolam, and butorphanol treatment in rats
- Author
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Yutaka Nakanishi, Kyohei Kamio, Minoru Sasaki, Masaki Wakamatsu, and Junya Morita
- Subjects
genetic structures ,Butorphanol ,Midazolam ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Toxicology ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Animals ,Hypnotics and Sedatives ,Medicine ,Anesthesia ,Anesthetics ,business.industry ,Corneal opacity ,Medetomidine ,Anesthetics, Combined ,eye diseases ,Nephrectomy ,Rats ,Anesthetic ,sense organs ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
An anesthetic mixture of medetomidine, midazolam and butorphanol (MMB) has been recently used in laboratory animals. We observed corneal opacity in nephrectomized rats that had undergone two operations under MMB anesthesia at 4 and 5 weeks of age. To evaluate the features of this corneal opacity, ophthalmic examinations were conducted in 83 nephrectomized rats, and 8 representative animals with corneal opacity were evaluated histopathologically 4 weeks after operation. The ophthalmic examinations revealed that 66/83 animals had corneal opacity, which was characterized histopathologically by mineralization with or without inflammation in the corneal stroma. In addition, to examine the possible causes of this corneal opacity, we investigated whether similar corneal changes were induced by the MMB anesthetic treatment in normal rats. The MMB anesthetic was administered twice to 4- and 5-week-old normal SD rats (5 animals/age) in the same manner as for the nephrectomized rats. Ophthalmic examinations were conducted in all the animals once a week, and the animals were necropsied 4 weeks after the first administration. In normal rats, similar corneal opacity was observed after the first administration, and increases in the severity and size of the corneal opacity were noted after the second administration. In conclusion, this study revealed the features of corneal opacity in rats undergoing nephrectomy under MMB anesthesia and the occurrence of similar corneal opacity in normal rats treated with MMB anesthetic. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of corneal opacity related to MMB anesthetic treatment in rats.
- Published
- 2021