Benito
de Celis Alonso1, Tanya Makarova1, Andreas Hess1
1Pharmacology and Toxicology, FAU
Erlangen Nuremberg, Erlangen, Bayern, Germany
Animal
experimentation in neurosciences requires
the use of anesthetics for animal welfare and cooperation. Two of the
most widely used anesthetics for functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
of animals are Isofluorane (Iso) and Alpha-Chloralose (AC). Iso is an
volatile drug shown to be suitable to obtain fMRI images at low
concentrations(1). AC is an injectable anesthetic with strong
functional-metabolic coupling but can create physiological problems.
Therefore, it has been used as a non recoverable. There are studies were AC
was used on human patients and others were AC was used to anaesthetize and
recover dogs and cats (2,3). To our knowledge, the non-recoverable concept
has not been challenged properly for fMRI. Here we present a protocol for AC
anesthetic preparation and a fMRI study that shows that AC can be used as a
recoverable anesthetic and has no effects on the fMRI results when animals
are reused. Furthermore parallel behavioral studies on recovered rats show no
effect on their brain and motor function.