The following articles have been selected by panel members of ANZCCART to help researchers and AEC members improve their understanding of anaesthesia in research animals.
- (-) Remove Ethics filter Ethics
- (-) Remove Refinement filter Refinement
- (-) Remove Reduction filter Reduction
- (-) Remove Ferret filter Ferret
- (-) Remove Non-Human Primate filter Non-Human Primate
- (-) Remove Dog filter Dog
3Rs
CAMARADES provides a supporting framework for groups involved in the systematic review and meta-analysis of data.
The JWGR organises working groups with experts from industry, academia and animal welfare to prepare reports on a variety of specific topics.
Blood sampling can be stressful for laboratory animals because of the handling, restraint, anaesthesia or discomfort associated with a particular technique
SyRF is a fully integrated online platform for performing systematic reviews of preclinical studies.
The suffering that animals experience when they are used in research and testing is a very serious concern. We believe that every possible step must be taken to reduce animal suffering to an absolute minimum.
The IMPROVE Guidelines (Ischaemia Models: Procedural Refinements Of in Vivo Experiments) - have been published in the Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism
"The Design of Animal Experiments" is intended for all research scientists who use laboratory animals, with the aim of helping them to design their own experiments more effectively.
Good training in non-aversive handling has benefits for the animal, for the handler and for the reliability of data gained in experiments.
Isogenic strains (inbred strains and F1 hybrids) are like immortal clones of genetically identical individuals. The same genotype can be reproduced indefinitely. They have already made a substantial contribution to biomedical research.