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Optimizing anesthesia and delivery approaches for dosing into lungs of mice

Authors :
Yurim Seo
Longhui Qiu
Mélia Magnen
Catharina Conrad
S. Farshid Moussavi-Harami
Mark R Looney
Simon J Cleary
Source :
bioRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

Microbes, toxins, therapeutics and cells are often instilled into lungs of mice to model diseases and test experimental interventions. Consistent pulmonary delivery is critical for experimental power and reproducibility, but we observed variation in outcomes between handlers using different anesthetic approaches for intranasal dosing into mice. We therefore used a radiotracer to quantify lung delivery after intranasal dosing under inhalational (isoflurane) versus injectable (ketamine/xylazine) anesthesia in C57BL/6 mice. We found that ketamine/xylazine anesthesia resulted in delivery of a greater proportion (52±9%) of an intranasal dose to lungs relative to isoflurane anesthesia (30±15%). This difference in pulmonary dose delivery altered key outcomes in a model of viral pneumonia, with mice anesthetized with ketamine/xylazine for intranasal infection with influenza A virus developing worse lung pathology and more consistently losing body weight relative to control animals randomized to isoflurane anesthesia. Pulmonary dosing efficiency through oropharyngeal aspiration was not affected by anesthetic method and resulted in delivery of 63±8% of dose to lungs, and a non-surgical intratracheal dosing approach further increased lung delivery to 92±6% of dose. We conclude that anesthetic approach and dosing route can impact pulmonary dosing efficiency. These factors should be considered when planning and reporting studies involving delivery of fluids to lungs of mice.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
bioRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a9f3b90ff21318f1aaa70cf90aa53232
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.02.01.526706