Behavior: aggression, anxiety, distress |
Open field arena |
Time spent in center vs. periphery |
Exploration; may reveal anxiety. Anxious mice are thought to spend less time in center |
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Light/dark box |
Time spent and mobility in light or dark side of a box |
Exploration; may reveal anxiety. Anxious mice are thought to spend less time in light side |
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Tail suspension test |
Time to immobility |
Measures chronic or induced despair/depression; longer time to immobility suggests more despair |
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Elevated plus maze |
Time spent in open or closed arms |
Measures anxiety; more time spent in closed arms suggest anxiety |
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Home cage monitoring: automated or observational |
Fighting, bite or scratch wounds, social behaviors |
Increased aggression may be due to chronic social stress |
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Hormone measurements |
Corticosterone, testosterone |
Stress is indicated by increased production of stress hormones |
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Organ weight |
Adrenal glands, testes |
Increased organ weight due to increased production of stress hormones |
Immune function |
Organ weight |
Spleen, thymus |
Increased weight due to increased production of immunologic factors or stress hormones |
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Flow cytometry |
T-cell subpopulations |
Immunologic status may change with chronic stress |
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Hematology |
Complete blood counts |
General well-being |
Cardiovascular |
Electrocardiogram, blood pressure, telemetry |
Heart rate |
Increases with increasing stress |
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Organ weight |
Heart weight |
May increase with increased chronic stress |
Reproduction |
Breeding success |
Litter size, time between litters, number of litters |
Small litters and increased time between litters may indicate distress |
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Litter success |
Pup weight, survival, play behavior, press posture, mortality |
Viability of pups reflects behavioral environment |
General health |
Growth |
Body weight increase with development |
Abnormal weight patterns may reflect social stress |
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Body composition (e.g., DEXA) |
Fat tissue mass, bone mineral density |
Chronic stress mice may inhibit body fat accumulation and reduce bone density |
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Food and water consumption |
Daily or weekly intake |
Abnormal eating or drinking patterns may reflect social stress |
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Mortality |
Number and timing of deaths |
Failure to thrive may reflect social stress |
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Clinical chemistries |
Plasma lipids, glucose |
General well-being |
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Cage microenvironment (air quality) |
CO2, NH3, temperature, relative humidity; nasal pathology |
Poor cage air quality compromises well-being; nasal pathology reflects deleterious effects of high concentrations of inhaled irritants |