Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add filters








Year range
1.
Rev. invest. clín ; 73(4): 199-209, Jul.-Aug. 2021. graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1347565

ABSTRACT

In the last century, progress in the knowledge of human diseases, their diagnosis and treatment have grown exponentially, due in large part to the introduction and use of laboratory animals. Along with this important progress, the need to provide training and guidance to the scientific community in all aspects related to the proper use of experimental animals has been indispensable. Animal research committees play a primary role in evaluating experimental research protocols, from their feasibility to the rational use of animals, but above all in seeking animal welfare. The Institutional Committee for the Care and Use of Animals (IACUC) has endeavored to share several relevant aspects in conducting research with laboratory animals. Here, we present and discuss the topics that we consider of utmost importance to take in the account during the design of any experimental research protocol, so we invite researchers, technicians, and undergraduate and graduate students to dive into the fascinating subject of proper animal care and use for experimentation. The main intention of these contributions is to sensitize users of laboratory animals for the proper and rational use of them in experimental research, as well as to disseminate the permitted and unpermitted procedures in laboratory animals. In the first part, the significance of experimental research, the main functions of IACUC, and the principle of the three R's (replacement, reduction, and refinement) are addressed.


Subject(s)
Animals , Animal Welfare , Animal Experimentation/ethics , Animal Care Committees , Research Design , Animals, Laboratory
2.
Parasitol. latinoam ; 58(3/4): 131-135, jul. 2003. tab
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-383492

ABSTRACT

Se realizó un estudio longitudinal durante un año, para determinar la presencia de parásitos intestinales en heces caninas y su relación con las condiciones climáticas. 481 muestras de heces fueron recolectadas en 13 plazas de dos ciudades de la Provincia del Chubut, Patagonia Argentina. Las muestras fueron analizadas por medio de los métodos de Telemann y Willis. Los datos meteorológicos se registraron diariamente. La frecuencia de aparición de muestras positivas para parásitos intestinales estuvo comprendida entre el 34,9 por ciento y 51,2 por ciento período estudiado, resultando la misma independiente de la estación climática (p > 0,05). Se registró un predominio de helmintos sobre protozoos durante las cuatro estaciones. La frecuencia de aparición de Entamoeba spp. y Nematoda resultó dependiente de la estación estudiada (p < 0,05). El hallazgo de huevos de T. canis varió de un 12,7 por ciento en invierno a un 20,9 por ciento en primavera. Se detectaron patógenos para el humanos como T. canis, Taenia spp., Uncinaria spp. y Entamoeba spp. Se reportan por primera vez para ésta región Spirocerca spp. y Capillaria spp.


Subject(s)
Dogs , Biological Contamination , Feces , Intestinal Diseases, Parasitic , Argentina , Longitudinal Studies , Seasons
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL