General Principles of Animal Selection and Normal Physiological Values

2009 
Animals used in meaningful experiments must be held long enough in approved facilities to insure that they are not incubating infectious diseases. If the animal care facility does not require this, responsible investigators must still make certain these precautions are taken. Animals should be vaccinated, or tested and certified to be free of the diseases most likely to cause a problem in that species or that can be transmitted to personnel working with them. They should be verified free of both internal and external parasites. Prior to use they should be given a complete physical exam. Normal physiological parameters for the most commonly used species are in this chapter. Depending upon the experimental design, it might be prudent to collect blood samples and establish normal hematological and/or serum enzyme levels for each individual animal used. Although these precautions can be time consuming and expensive, the costs are minimal when compared with the overall cost of conducting experiments where the results are suspect because the physical condition or general health of the subject animals is a problem.
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