Abstract
Pain assessment in laboratory animals is an ethical and legal requirement. The mouse grimace scale (MGS) is a new method of pain assessment deemed to be both accurate and reliable, and observers can be rapidly trained to use it. In order for a new pain assessment technique to be effective, we must ensure that the score awarded by the technique is only influenced by pain and not by other husbandry or non-painful but integral aspects of research protocols. Here, we studied 16 male mice, housed under standard laboratory conditions. Eight mice were randomly assigned to tail handling and eight to tube handling on arrival at the unit. On each occasion the mice were removed from their cage for routine husbandry, they were picked up using their assigned handling method. Photographs of the mouse faces were then scored by treatment-blind observers as per the MGS manual (see Nature Methods 2010, Vol. 7, pp 447–449), and scores from the two groups were compared. There was no significant difference in MGS scores between the mice that had been handled using a tube compared with the tail. Consequently, these methods of handling did not influence the baseline grimace score given, suggesting that these handling techniques are not confounding factors when establishing baseline MGS scores, further validating this technique.
Highlights
Millions of mice are used annually in regulated procedures.[1]
Handling is likely to be the most common procedure that is experienced by all laboratory mice, as it is integral to carrying out both routine husbandry and research procedures
Any changes in mouse grimace scale (MGS) scores related to the handling method would have to be accounted for when using this method of assessment of pain
Summary
Millions of mice are used annually in regulated procedures.[1]. An unintended consequence of many of these procedures is likely to be pain, which is a major welfare concern. The standard method of handling laboratory mice often involves initially picking mice up by the base of their tails.
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