Abstract

Administration of anaesthesia may influence specific aspects of in vivo animal experiments and is an especially important consideration for experiments conducted during the daytime. Although chronobiological studies investigating interactions between general anaesthesia and circadian rhythms are sparse, all suggest that general anaesthetic agents have a significant effect on circadian rhythms. To assess the suitability of pentobarbital anaesthesia in chronobiological studies, this study was performed using pentobarbital-anaesthetized (40 mg/kg, intraperitoneal) female Wistar rats after adaptation to a light–dark (LD) cycle (12 h:12 h). Heart rate, rectal temperature (RT), electrocardiographic parameters, autonomic nervous system activity, acid–base balance and plasma concentrations of Na+, K+, Ca2+ and Cl- were evaluated for their dependence on the LD cycle. LD differences were found in heart rate and RT, measured before the administration of the anaesthetic agent. Pentobarbital anaesthesia eliminated LD differences in all electrophysiological parameters, parameters of heart rate variability (except RR intervals) and parameters of acid–base balance and ion concentrations. LD differences with borderline statistical significance were found only for Na+ levels, with a higher level in the light period (i.e. nonactive) of the rat regimen day. During pentobarbital anaesthesia, parasympathetic tone predominates and sympathetic activity is depressed. Spontaneously breathing rats under pentobarbital anaesthesia are in an asphyxic state independent of the LD cycle in in vivo experiments. Results of this study suggest that pentobarbital anaesthesia is not suitable for chronobiological studies. However, it is suitable for cardiovascular research that is done regardless of the circadian rhythmicity, because it does not cause significant changes in heart activity.

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