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Carprofen

Carprofen is a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) commonly used in veterinary medicine to treat pain and inflammation in animals.
It works by inhibiting the production of prostaglandins, which play a key role in the inflammatory process.
Carprofen is approved for use in dogs and is sometimes prescribed off-label for other species.
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Most cited protocols related to «Carprofen»

The experiments were carried out on thirteen (3.5–6.9 years old) rhesus (Macaca mulatta) or cynomolgus (Macaca fascicularis) monkeys (male or female, 3.0–5.0 kg; see Table 1), in accordance to the Guide for Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (ISBN 0-309-05377-3; 1996) and approved by local veterinary authorities, including the ethical assessment by the local (cantonal) Survey Committee on Animal Experimentation and a final acceptance delivered by the Federal Veterinary Office (BVET, Bern, Switzerland). The monkeys were obtained from our own colony in our animal facility (Macaca fascicularis) or were purchased (Macaca fascicularis and Macaca mulatta) from a certified supplier (BioPrim; 31450 Baziège; France), with the authorization to import the animals delivered by the Federal Veterinary Office (BVET, Bern, Switzerland). Three recent reports (Wannier et al., 2005 (link); Freund et al., 2006a (link), 2007 (link)) describe the behavioral task analyzed in the present report (‘modified Brinkman board’ task; see Fig. 1E and also http://www.unifr.ch/neuro/rouiller/motorcontcadre.htm), the surgical procedures (including transection of the CS tract in the cervical cord at C7/C8 level), the treatment with the anti-Nogo-A (n = 7) or control (n = 6) antibodies and the neuroanatomical investigations (including assessment of spinal lesion location and extent). The antibodies’ characteristics and penetration in the central nervous system have been reported elsewhere (Weinmann et al., 2006 (link); Freund et al., 2007 (link)). As previously reported in detail (Schmidlin et al., 2004 (link), 2005 (link); Wannier et al., 2005 (link); Freund et al., 2006a (link), 2007 (link)).
The present study includes the same twelve previously reported monkeys (Freund et al., 2006a (link), 2007 (link)) and a thirteenth monkey (Mk-AK), on which the experiment was completed later, and in which anti-Nogo-A antibody infusion was initiated 7 days post-lesion (Fig. 1A), in contrast to immediate infusion the day of the lesion in the other six anti-Nogo-A antibody-treated monkeys. However, in this thirteenth monkey (Mk-AK), although an osmotic pump was implanted immediately after the lesion (as was the case for all the other monkeys), only saline (NaCl 0.9%) was delivered during the first week, and delayed administration of the anti-Nogo-A antibody started 1 week post-lesion. In all cases, the antibody was delivered for a period of 4 weeks.
The monkeys’ identification codes refer to individual monkeys (Table 1 in Freund et al., 2006a (link)) and comprise, for the sake of clarity, a ‘C’ or an ‘A’ in the fourth character position, indicating whether the monkey was control antibody-treated or anti-Nogo-A antibody-treated, respectively. However, during the course of the experiments the animals had different names from which the experimenter could not deduce which antibody was infused, at least for the monkeys in which the experimenter-blind procedure was applied (Table 1).
Monkeys were housed in our animal facilities in rooms of 12 m3, each usually containing 2–4 monkeys free to move in the room and to interact with each other. In the morning, before behavioral testing, the animal keeper placed the monkeys in temporary cages for subsequent transfer to the primate chair. The monkeys had free access to water and were not food-deprived. The rewards obtained during the behavioral tests represented the first daily access to food. After the tests, the monkeys received additional food (fruits and cereals). The dexterity of each hand was assessed in all lesioned monkeys with a finger prehension task, specifically our modified Brinkman board quantitative test (Fig. 1E; see also Rouiller et al., 1998 (link); Liu & Rouiller, 1999 (link); Schmidlin et al., 2004 (link)). The tests were conducted using a Perspex board (10 cm × 20 cm) containing 50 randomly distributed slots, each filled with a food pellet at the beginning of the test (home-made behavioral apparatus). Twenty-five slots were oriented horizontally and twenty-five vertically. The dimensions of the slots were 15 mm long, 8 mm wide and 6 mm deep. Retrieval of the food pellets required fractionated finger movements, in order to produce an opposition of the index finger and the thumb, which corresponds to the precision grip. This manual prehension dexterity task was executed daily, alternatively with one and the other hand, four or five times per week for several months before and after the unilateral cervical cord lesion. A daily behavioral session typically lasted 60 min. The performance of each hand was videotaped. In the present study, two parameters were assessed: (i) the retrieval score, i.e. the number of wells from which the food pellets were successfully retrieved and brought to the mouth during 30 s, separately for the vertical and the horizontal slots; (ii) the contact time, defined as the time of contact (in s) between the fingers and the pellet, calculated for the first vertical slot and the first horizontal slot targeted by the monkey in a given daily session (see also paragraph 2 in the Results section). The contact time is comparable to the prehension time as introduced by Nishimura et al. (2007) (link) in parallel to the present study, but for a different grasping task. In our previous study, the retrieval score represented the primary outcome measure from the modified Brinkman board task (Freund et al., 2006a (link)) and was determined by the total number of pellets retrieved in 30 s. In the present study separate scores are provided for vertical and horizontal slots. The contact time data and the bivariate and trivariate statistical analyses (see below) represent secondary outcome measures from the modified Brinkman board task, newly introduced in the present report.
After the monkeys reached a level of performance corresponding to a plateau (usually after 30–60 days of initial training), we used the score from 30–50 daily sessions to establish a pre-lesion behavioral score for each monkey. A unilateral cervical cord lesion was performed in thirteen monkeys as follows. Intramuscular injection of ketamine (Ketalar® Parke-Davis, 5 mg/kg, i.m.) was delivered to induce anesthesia followed by an injection of atropine (i.m.; 0.05 mg/kg) to reduce bronchial secretions. In addition, before surgery, the animal was treated with the analgesic Carprofen (Rymadil®, 4 mg/kg, s.c.). A continuous perfusion (0.1 ml/min/kg) through an intravenous catheter placed in the femoral vein delivered a mixture of 1% propofol (Fresenius®) and a 4% glucose solution (1 volume of propofol and 2 volumes of glucose solution) to induce a deep and stable anesthesia. The animal's head was placed in a stereotaxic headholder, using ear bars covered at their tip with local anesthetic. The surgery was carried out under aseptic conditions, with continuous monitoring of the following parameters: heart rate, respiration rate, expired CO2, arterial O2 saturation and body temperature. In early experiments, an extra intravenous bolus of 0.5 mg of ketamine diluted in saline (0.9%) was added at potentially more painful steps of the surgical procedure (e.g. laminectomy) whereas, in later experiments, ketamine was added to the perfusion solution and delivered throughout surgery (0.0625 mg/min/kg). The animal recovered from anesthesia 15–30 min after the propofol perfusion was stopped, and was treated post-operatively with an antibiotic (Ampiciline 10%, 30 mg/kg, s.c.). Additional doses of Carprofen were given daily (pills of Rymadil mixed with food) for about 2 weeks after the surgery. Following the cervical cord lesion, the animal was kept alone in a separate cage for a couple of days in order to perform a careful survey of its condition. The details of surgical procedures and lesioning are available in previous reports (Schmidlin et al., 2004 (link), 2005 (link); Wannier et al., 2005 (link); Freund et al., 2006a (link), 2007 (link)).
After lesion, and following the period of recovery lasting generally 30–40 days, a post-lesion level of performance corresponding to a plateau was established, based on a block of ten behavioral sessions (usually the last ten sessions conducted). For the retrieval score, functional recovery was expressed quantitatively as the ratio (expressed as a percentage) of the post-lesion average retrieval score value to the pre-lesion average score value. Because contact time was measured only for the first vertical and first horizontal slots targeted by the monkey, in order to minimize the impact of outliers the pre-lesion and post-lesion contact time was assessed as the median value (Fig. 3C and D). Considering that good performance is reflected by a short contact time (in the pre-lesion condition), post-lesion performance (recovery) was expressed quantitatively as the ratio (expressed as a percentage) of the pre-lesion median contact time to the post-lesion median contact time. For measures of both recovery of score and contact time, if the calculated values exceeded 100% (i.e. post-lesion performance was better than pre-lesion performance), the recovery was considered to be complete and therefore expressed quantitatively as 100%.
Besides the new behavioral parameter of contact time introduced here, the present study also comprises a new analysis regarding the lesion size. In our previous reports (Freund et al., 2006a (link), 2007 (link)), the extent of the lesion was expressed as a percentage of the corresponding hemi-cord surface, as assessed from a 2-D reconstruction of the lesion in the transverse plane (see Fig. 1B and C). These standard values of lesion extent have been considered here again in Figs 2 and 4 (see also Table 1). The present study expands upon these data by further calculating the estimated volume of the cervical lesion in order to consider the extent of the lesion in 3-D. After completion of the post-lesion behavioral analysis (see below), the monkeys were killed and prepared for histology as follows. Each monkey was pre-anaesthetized with ketamine (5 mg/kg, i.m.) and given an overdose of sodium pentobarbital (Vetanarcol; 90 mg/kg, i.p.). Transcardiac perfusion of saline (0.9%) was followed by paraformaldehyde (4% in phosphate buffer 0.1 m, pH 7.4), and 10, 20 and 30% solutions of sucrose in phosphate buffer. The brain and the spinal cord were dissected and stored overnight in a solution of 30% sucrose in phosphate buffer. Frozen sections (50 μm thick) of the cervical cord (approximately segments C6-T3) were cut in the parasagittal longitudinal plane and collected in three series for later histological processing (see below).
Using an ad hoc function of the Neurolucida software (based on the Cavalieri method; MicroBrightField, Inc., Colchester, VT, USA), the volume of the cervical lesion (in mm3) was extrapolated from the reconstructions of the lesion on consecutive histological longitudinal sections of the cervical cord (see Table 1). The volume measurement of the cervical lesion was conducted on one out of three series of sagittal sections (50 μm thick), treated immunocytochemically with the SMI-32 antibody (Covance, Berkeley, CA, USA), as previously reported (Liu et al., 2002 (link); Beaud et al., 2008 (link); Wannier-Morino et al., 2008 (link)). The epitope recognized by the SMI-32 antibody lies on nonphosphorylated regions of neurofilament protein and is only expressed by specific categories of neurons (Campbell & Morrison, 1989 (link); Tsang et al., 2006 (link)). The other two series of sections were processed to visualize biotinylated dextran amine (BDA; Invitrogen, Molecular Probe, Eugene, OR, USA) and fluorescein dextran amine (Invitrogen, Molecular Probe, Eugene, OR, USA) staining, resulting from injections of BDA in the contralesional motor cortex and fluorescein dextran amine in the ipsilesional motor cortex (see Freund et al., 2006a (link), 2007 (link)). Measurements of volume of the cervical lesion were also conducted on sections processed for BDA but the lesion contour was not as well defined as on the SMI-32-stained sections, where a clear scar region could be distinguished from a penumbra lesion at the periphery of the lesion (yellow and red outlines in Fig. 1D). The scar region was characterized by a dense fibrous tissue or granulous tissue forming a central zone of the lesion where the SMI-32 staining was absent. The lesion volume data presented (Table 1, Fig. 5) and considered for statistical analysis (Table 2) are the measurements corresponding to the scar as seen on the SMI-32-stained sections.
Because of the limited number of animals, two independent statistical tests were used to compare the group of control antibody-treated monkeys (n = 6) with the group of anti-Nogo-A antibody-treated monkeys (n = 7). The first test (based on a linear Fisher discriminant analysis) takes into account one of the two parameters reflecting the size of the lesion (i.e. the extent of hemi-cord lesion or the volume of the lesion) and one of the four parameters reflecting the percentage of functional recovery (score for vertical slots, score for horizontal slots; contact time for vertical slots or contact time for horizontal slots), and thus is aimed at assessing the overlap or segregation between the two groups of data (Figs 2E and F, and 4C and D). The test provides maximal separation between the groups (see Everitt, 2005 ) in the form of a linear function of the observed variables such that the ratio of the between-groups variance to its within-group variance is maximized. We used the R package to get the two lines plotted in each of Figs 2E and F, and 4C and D. Line 1 (dashed line) yields maximal separation and the projected samples are provided on the orthogonal line 2 (solid line). For better visualization, line 2 was proportionally enlarged and positioned vertically on the right side of the graph (green arrows). With respect to the statistics, the sample size does not permit an assumption of normality so we considered the statistical problem of separation of the projected samples using the nonparametric Mann–Whitney U-test. The obtained results are summarized in Table 2 (row A, bivariate analysis).
The second statistical test (the trivariate analysis) examined the three-dimensional data produced by differences in ‘recovery of scores’ (number of pellets retrieved, as illustrated in Fig. 2), ‘recovery of contact time’ (time to grasp first pellet, as illustrated in Fig. 4) and ‘lesion extent’, using a nonparametric multivariate rank test (Oja & Randles, 2004 ). This test includes all three parameters and can be considered an index of overall functional recovery. We assumed two independent random samples from bivariate distributions F(x-c1) and F(x-c2) located at centers c1 and c2, and tested the null hypothesis that there was no effect of treatment (i.e. c1 = c2 versus the alternative c1 is different from c2). Data were transformed to make the test affine-invariant, to ensure a consistent performance over all possible choices of coordinate system, and then projected onto a sphere where a rank test was performed. As the law for this test is still unknown, we used Monte-Carlo simulations to compute the P-value. The obtained results are summarized in Table 2 (row B, trivariate analysis). A complete description of these bivariate and trivariate statistical analyses, applicable also to other types of lesions and to other behavioral tests of manual dexterity in primates, will be reported elsewhere in a methodological report. The same two statistical analyses (bivariate and trivariate tests) were applied in a similar way as above for the estimated volume of the lesion (Table 2, rows C and D).
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Publication 2009

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Publication 2013
Anesthesia Animals Brain carprofen Cells Craniotomy Dehydration Dura Mater Females Food Glucose Heterozygote Injections, Intraperitoneal Ketamine Males Medetomidine Mice, House Motor Cortex Needles Neurons Operative Surgical Procedures Rectum Reflex Saline Solution Subcutaneous Injections Xylazine
Mice were anesthetized with 1.5 to 2.0% isoflurane for surgical procedures and placed into a stereotactic frame (David Kopf Instruments, Tujunga, CA). Lidocaine (2%; Akorn, Lake Forest, IL) was applied to the sterilized incision site as an analgesic, while subcutaneous saline injections were administered throughout each surgical procedure to prevent dehydration. In addition, carprofen (5mg/kg) and dexamethasone (0.2mg/kg) were administered both during surgery and for 7 days post-surgery with amoxicillin.
For calcium imaging experiments, mice underwent two separate surgical procedures. First, mice were unilaterally microinjected with 500 nanoliters of AAV1.Syn.GCaMP6f.WPRE.SV40 virus at 50nl/min into the dorsal CA1 using the stereotactic coordinates: −2.1 mm posterior to bregma, 2.0 mm lateral to midline and −1.65 mm ventral to skull surface. Two weeks later, the microendoscope (a gradient refractive index lens) was implanted above the previous injection site. For the procedure, a 2.0mm diameter circular craniotomy was centered 0.5mm medial to the virus injection site. Artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) was repeatedly applied to the exposed tissue to prevent drying. The cortex directly below the craniotomy was aspirated with a 27-gauge blunt syringe needle attached to a vacuum pump. The microendoscope (0.25 pitch, 0.50 NA, 2.0mm in diameter and 4.79 in length, Grintech Gmbh) was slowly lowered with a stereotaxic arm above CA1 to a depth of 1.35mm ventral to the surface of the skull at the most posterior point of the craniotomy. Next, a skull screw was used to anchor the microendoscope to the skull. Both the microendoscope and skull screw were fixed with cyanoacrylate and dental cement. Kwik-Sil (World Precision Instruments) covered the microendoscope. Two weeks later, a small plastic baseplate was cemented onto the animal’s head atop the previously formed dental cement. Debris was removed from the exposed lens with ddH2O, lens paper and forceps. The microscope was placed on top of the baseplate and locked in a position in which the field of focus was in view, so that cells and visible landmarks, such as blood vessels, appeared sharp and in focus. Finally, a plastic cover was fit into the baseplate and secured by magnets.
For aged DREADD experiments, mice were bilaterally microinjected with 700 nanoliters of Lentivirus CaMK2.hM3Dq.T2A.EGFP/dTomato virus at 100nl/min into the dorsal CA1 using the stereotactic coordinates: −1.80 mm posterior to bregma, +/−1.50 mm lateral to midline, −1.60 mm ventral to skull surface; −2.50 mm posterior to bregma, +/−2.00 mm lateral to midline, −1.70 mm ventral to skull surface.
Publication 2016
Mice were anesthetized with 1.5 to 2.0% isoflurane for surgical procedures and placed into a stereotactic frame (David Kopf Instruments, Tujunga, CA). Lidocaine (2%; Akorn, Lake Forest, IL) was applied to the sterilized incision site as an analgesic, while subcutaneous saline injections were administered throughout each surgical procedure to prevent dehydration. In addition, carprofen (5mg/kg) and dexamethasone (0.2mg/kg) were administered both during surgery and for 7 days post-surgery with amoxicillin.
For calcium imaging experiments, mice underwent two separate surgical procedures. First, mice were unilaterally microinjected with 500 nanoliters of AAV1.Syn.GCaMP6f.WPRE.SV40 virus at 50nl/min into the dorsal CA1 using the stereotactic coordinates: −2.1 mm posterior to bregma, 2.0 mm lateral to midline and −1.65 mm ventral to skull surface. Two weeks later, the microendoscope (a gradient refractive index lens) was implanted above the previous injection site. For the procedure, a 2.0mm diameter circular craniotomy was centered 0.5mm medial to the virus injection site. Artificial cerebrospinal fluid (ACSF) was repeatedly applied to the exposed tissue to prevent drying. The cortex directly below the craniotomy was aspirated with a 27-gauge blunt syringe needle attached to a vacuum pump. The microendoscope (0.25 pitch, 0.50 NA, 2.0mm in diameter and 4.79 in length, Grintech Gmbh) was slowly lowered with a stereotaxic arm above CA1 to a depth of 1.35mm ventral to the surface of the skull at the most posterior point of the craniotomy. Next, a skull screw was used to anchor the microendoscope to the skull. Both the microendoscope and skull screw were fixed with cyanoacrylate and dental cement. Kwik-Sil (World Precision Instruments) covered the microendoscope. Two weeks later, a small plastic baseplate was cemented onto the animal’s head atop the previously formed dental cement. Debris was removed from the exposed lens with ddH2O, lens paper and forceps. The microscope was placed on top of the baseplate and locked in a position in which the field of focus was in view, so that cells and visible landmarks, such as blood vessels, appeared sharp and in focus. Finally, a plastic cover was fit into the baseplate and secured by magnets.
For aged DREADD experiments, mice were bilaterally microinjected with 700 nanoliters of Lentivirus CaMK2.hM3Dq.T2A.EGFP/dTomato virus at 100nl/min into the dorsal CA1 using the stereotactic coordinates: −1.80 mm posterior to bregma, +/−1.50 mm lateral to midline, −1.60 mm ventral to skull surface; −2.50 mm posterior to bregma, +/−2.00 mm lateral to midline, −1.70 mm ventral to skull surface.
Publication 2016
Amoxicillin Analgesics Animals Blood Vessel Calcium, Dietary carprofen Cells Cerebrospinal Fluid Cortex, Cerebral Craniotomy Cranium Cyanoacrylates Dehydration Dental Cements Dexamethasone Forceps Forests Head Isoflurane Lens, Crystalline Lentivirinae Lidocaine Microscopy Mus Needles Operative Surgical Procedures Reading Frames Saline Solution Simian virus 40 Subcutaneous Injections Syringes Tissues Vacuum Virus
For experiments investigating general transduction efficiency three to seven mice were used per serotype and brain region (Figure 1). Animals were deeply anesthetized with a mixture of ketamine and medetomidine (KM; 2.5 mg ketamine-HCl and 0.02 mg medetomidine-HCl/25 g mouse weight) injected intraperitoneally, and positioned in a stereotaxic frame (Kopf Instruments, Tujunga, CA; Stereotaxic System Kopf 1900). A local anaesthetic (lidocaine) was applied subcutaneously before exposure of the skull. Small holes were drilled into the skull and injections were performed unilaterally using a thin glass pipette with 80 nl of virus solution (titer: 9.6 * 1011 viral genomes (VG)/ml in PBS) at a flow rate of 20 nl/min (World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL; Nanoliter 2000 Injector). Glass pipettes (World Precision Instruments, Sarasota, FL; Glass Capillaries for Nanoliter 2000; Order# 4878) had been pulled with a long taper and the tip was cut to a diameter of 20-40µm. After the injection, the pipette was left in place for 3 minutes, before being slowly withdrawn. Coordinates for injections were (in mm: caudal, lateral, and ventral to bregma): striatum (0.9, 1.5, 3.2), hippocampus (-1.9, 1.6, 1.6), cortex (-2.9, 4.25, 2.5). After surgery, anesthesia was neutralized with 0.02 ml atipamezole. Mice were monitored daily and intraperitoneal injections of carprofen (0.2 ml of 0.5 mg/ml stock) were applied on the first days after surgery.
For injections of LPS (Escherichia coli 0127:B8, Sigma-Aldrich, Germany; Figure 4A), mice were anesthetized with 1-2 vol% isoflurane in oxygen and two µl of LPS dissolved in saline (5 µg/µl) were infused at a flow rate of 0.2 µl/min into the striatum (coordinates (in mm) relative to bregma: 0.5, 2.0, -3.5). The cannula was left in place for further 5 minutes before being removed.
In the experiments investigating retrograde transport (Figures 5, 6), three mice were unilaterally injected with 250 nl of a 4:1 mixture of rAAV5 solution (titer s.a.) and cholera toxin subunit B-alexa fluor 555 conjugate (Invitrogen, C-22843; 1 mg/ml in PBS) into the hippocampus (same coordinates as above). Surgery, pharmacology, and injection were carried out as above.
When analyzing the time-course of expression (Figure 7 and Figure S4), mice received 80 nl injections into the striatum (titer: 1.01 * 1012 VG/ml; same coordinates as above). One hemisphere was injected with either a (self-complementing) scGFP/scCherry and the other hemisphere was injected with either a (single strand) ssCherry/ssGFP virus solution. Surgery, pharmacology, and injection as above.
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Publication 2013
Alexa Fluor 555 Anesthesia Animals atipamezole Brain Cannula Capillaries carprofen Cholera Cortex, Cerebral Cranium Escherichia coli Injections, Intraperitoneal Isoflurane Ketamine Ketamine Hydrochloride Lidocaine Local Anesthesia Medetomidine Mice, House Operative Surgical Procedures Oxygen Protein Subunits Reading Frames Saline Solution Seahorses Striatum, Corpus Toxins, Chimeric Viral Genome Virus

Most recents protocols related to «Carprofen»

Pharmacokinetic analysis was performed in Monolix (2023R1, SimulationsPlus) using a custom model as previously described (16 (link)), the tissue cage concentrations were driven by the central compartment with the length of the cage in centimeters used as the regressor value. The model was run on both raw carprofen concentrations and on the corrected carprofen concentration. Confidence intervals for the parameters estimated by Monolix were generated using the Rsmlx package in R (21 ).
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Publication 2024
Carprofen (Pivetal) was provided in the drinking water (10mg/kg which is equivalent to 0.067 mg/ml) which was refreshed every 7 days. Buprenorphine-ER (Fidelis Animal Health), a 72-hour extended-release formulation, was given by subcutaneous injection (3.25 mg/kg) every 72 hours. Vehicle-treated animals were treated with subcutaneous injection of saline. Drug treatments commenced on day 7 post-tumor implantation in all groups. Given that buprenorphine treatment requires a subcutaneous injection every 3 days, mice in the other groups (vehicle and carprofen) received a subcutaneous injection of saline at the same volume (60 μl) as the buprenorphine-treated animals. In this way, all animal stress from handling and injection was the same.
Publication Preprint 2024
The optical fiber implantation procedure was carried out under anesthesia using a stereotactic frame, as mentioned previously. An optical fiber (200-μm-diameter core and 0.39 numerical aperture; Newdoon Technology) was held by a stereotaxic manipulator and inserted into the brain. The tip of the optical fiber was located slightly on top (∼200 μm dorsoventral) of the targeted region. A custom-designed headpost was attached to the skull with four screws for head fixation. The optical fiber cannula and headpost were fixed with dental cement for later stimulation and recording. After surgery, the mice were allowed to recover for 2–3 weeks before experiments began. Analgesic (carprofen, 5 mg/kg, i.p.) was injected with carprofen immediately after the surgery for consecutive 3 days.
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Publication 2024
Viral injections and the head bar attachment were performed during the same surgery session. Anesthesia was induced as described above. Rimadyl (carprofen) was injected subcutaneously (5 mg/kg) at the start of the surgery. We applied a lidocaine spray to the scalp as a local analgesic. After making the incision, the lidocaine spray was also applied to the periosteum. We then cleaned the skull, thereby removing the periosteum, and slightly etched the skull using a micro curette. We then applied a light-cured dental primer (Kerr Optibond) to improve the bonding of cement to the skull. After applying the primer, we created a base layer of cement on top of the primer using Vivadent Tetric evoflow light-cured dental cement. The head bar was placed on top of this base layer and fixed in place using more cement. Viral injection methods were as described above. Post-surgery, we administered carprofen through drinking water in the home cage (0.06 mg/ml) for ~72 hr, starting the day after the surgery. Mice were habituated to being head-fixed in a setup for up to two weeks prior to recording. When the mice were habituated, we performed a craniotomy surgery. Here, in addition to carprofen, buprenorphine was administered subcutaneously (0.05 mg/kg) at the start of the surgery. Further methods for craniotomy surgery were described above.
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Publication 2024
The AOA (Ankle Osteoarthritis) mouse model was established as previously described61 (link),62 (link). Briefly, 4-month-old C57BL/6 female mice (Jackson Laboratory) were anesthetized and underwent AOA or a sham operation of right paw. Postoperative care consisted of an injection of 5.0 mg/kg carprofen (Rimadyl; Zoetis Inc, Parsippany-Troy Hills, NJ) diluted with saline, time under a warming lamp, and visual monitoring at least once every 24 h for 72 h. A 12.5-mg carprofen tablet was administered for pain management, no additional medication was needed. All animals were maintained at the animal facility of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. We obtained whole blood samples by cardiac puncture immediately after euthanasia. Serum was collected by centrifuge at 1 500 r/min for 15 min and stored at −80°C before analyses. Talus of the mice were also collected.
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Publication 2024

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Rimadyl is a veterinary pharmaceutical product manufactured by Pfizer. It is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used to reduce inflammation and pain in dogs and cats. The active ingredient in Rimadyl is carprofen.
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Rimadyl is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) for veterinary use. It is designed to reduce inflammation, pain, and fever in dogs.
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Carprofen is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used for veterinary purposes. It is a synthetic compound that exhibits analgesic, anti-inflammatory, and antipyretic properties. Carprofen is commonly used in the treatment of pain and inflammation associated with various conditions in animals.
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The Stereotaxic frame is a laboratory instrument used to immobilize and position the head of a subject, typically an animal, during surgical or experimental procedures. It provides a secure and reproducible method for aligning the subject's head in a three-dimensional coordinate system to enable precise targeting of specific brain regions.
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Carprofen is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) used in veterinary medicine. It is commonly used to reduce inflammation and pain in animals. The core function of Carprofen is to provide pain relief and reduce inflammation in animals.
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More about "Carprofen"

Carprofen, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) commonly used in veterinary medicine, is a powerful tool for treating pain and inflammation in animals.
This medication works by inhibiting the production of prostaglandins, which play a crucial role in the inflammatory process.
Approved for use in dogs, Carprofen is sometimes prescribed off-label for other species as well.
Researchers studying the effects of Carprofen on animal health and well-being can leverage the AI-driven platform PubCompare.ai to enhance the reproducibility and accuracy of their studies.
The platform helps locate relevant protocols from literature, preprints, and patents, and provides AI-comparisons to identify the best protocols and products.
This can help improve Carprofen research and optimize the workflow, leading to more reliable and informative findings.
Rimadyl, a brand name for Carprofen, is another commonly used NSAID in veterinary medicine.
Stereotaxic frames, used for precise positioning of animals during procedures, can be utilized in Carprofen research studies.
Baytril, an antibiotic, and Rompun, a sedative, may also be used alongside Carprofen in certain animal studies.
Sprague-Dawley rats are a popular rodent model often employed in Carprofen-related research.
By leveraging the insights and tools provided by PubCompare.ai, researchers can enhance the quality and reproducibility of their Carprofen studies, leading to more accurate and informative findings that advance our understanding of this important veterinary medication and its applications.