Acclimatization of mice to different cage types and social groupings with respect to fecal secretion of IgA and corticosterone metabolites

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Acclimatization of mice to different cage types and social groupings with respect to fecal secretion of IgA and corticosterone metabolites. / Bundgaard, Cathrine Juel; Kalliokoski, Otto; Abelson, Klas Sp; Hau, Jann.

In: In Vivo, Vol. 26, No. 6, 2012, p. 883-8.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Bundgaard, CJ, Kalliokoski, O, Abelson, KS & Hau, J 2012, 'Acclimatization of mice to different cage types and social groupings with respect to fecal secretion of IgA and corticosterone metabolites', In Vivo, vol. 26, no. 6, pp. 883-8.

APA

Bundgaard, C. J., Kalliokoski, O., Abelson, K. S., & Hau, J. (2012). Acclimatization of mice to different cage types and social groupings with respect to fecal secretion of IgA and corticosterone metabolites. In Vivo, 26(6), 883-8.

Vancouver

Bundgaard CJ, Kalliokoski O, Abelson KS, Hau J. Acclimatization of mice to different cage types and social groupings with respect to fecal secretion of IgA and corticosterone metabolites. In Vivo. 2012;26(6):883-8.

Author

Bundgaard, Cathrine Juel ; Kalliokoski, Otto ; Abelson, Klas Sp ; Hau, Jann. / Acclimatization of mice to different cage types and social groupings with respect to fecal secretion of IgA and corticosterone metabolites. In: In Vivo. 2012 ; Vol. 26, No. 6. pp. 883-8.

Bibtex

@article{3b233ccf56474c32a3bb109bccb8a84c,
title = "Acclimatization of mice to different cage types and social groupings with respect to fecal secretion of IgA and corticosterone metabolites",
abstract = "Stress associated with transport and change of environment may have widespread effects on physiological parameters in laboratory animals. To investigate the time needed for mice to acclimatize to a new environment, based on fecal IgA and corticosterone excretion, eightweek-old BALB/c mice of both genders were housed either in groups of eight in different cage types in open conventional cages, in Individual Ventilated Cages (IVC), in open conventional cages inside a plastic isolator, or in different group sizes (8, 4, 8, 10 or 12 mice in each group) in open conventional cages. Feces were collected from each cage on routine cage changing. There was no significant difference in corticosterone excretion in feces between animals housed in the different cage types or between animals housed in different group sizes. IgA excretion for both males and females was found to be affected by transfer of mice into a novel cage, and it was found that it takes at least four weeks for the mice to acclimatize to a new environment with respect to this parameter.",
author = "Bundgaard, {Cathrine Juel} and Otto Kalliokoski and Abelson, {Klas Sp} and Jann Hau",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
volume = "26",
pages = "883--8",
journal = "In Vivo",
issn = "0258-851X",
publisher = "International Institute of Anticancer Research",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Acclimatization of mice to different cage types and social groupings with respect to fecal secretion of IgA and corticosterone metabolites

AU - Bundgaard, Cathrine Juel

AU - Kalliokoski, Otto

AU - Abelson, Klas Sp

AU - Hau, Jann

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - Stress associated with transport and change of environment may have widespread effects on physiological parameters in laboratory animals. To investigate the time needed for mice to acclimatize to a new environment, based on fecal IgA and corticosterone excretion, eightweek-old BALB/c mice of both genders were housed either in groups of eight in different cage types in open conventional cages, in Individual Ventilated Cages (IVC), in open conventional cages inside a plastic isolator, or in different group sizes (8, 4, 8, 10 or 12 mice in each group) in open conventional cages. Feces were collected from each cage on routine cage changing. There was no significant difference in corticosterone excretion in feces between animals housed in the different cage types or between animals housed in different group sizes. IgA excretion for both males and females was found to be affected by transfer of mice into a novel cage, and it was found that it takes at least four weeks for the mice to acclimatize to a new environment with respect to this parameter.

AB - Stress associated with transport and change of environment may have widespread effects on physiological parameters in laboratory animals. To investigate the time needed for mice to acclimatize to a new environment, based on fecal IgA and corticosterone excretion, eightweek-old BALB/c mice of both genders were housed either in groups of eight in different cage types in open conventional cages, in Individual Ventilated Cages (IVC), in open conventional cages inside a plastic isolator, or in different group sizes (8, 4, 8, 10 or 12 mice in each group) in open conventional cages. Feces were collected from each cage on routine cage changing. There was no significant difference in corticosterone excretion in feces between animals housed in the different cage types or between animals housed in different group sizes. IgA excretion for both males and females was found to be affected by transfer of mice into a novel cage, and it was found that it takes at least four weeks for the mice to acclimatize to a new environment with respect to this parameter.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23160668

VL - 26

SP - 883

EP - 888

JO - In Vivo

JF - In Vivo

SN - 0258-851X

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 42014426