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Food Deprivation, Body Weight Loss and Anxiety-Related Behavior in Rats

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Food deprivation protocols are frequently used in behavioral studies. However, there is limited evidence as to when food deprivation compromises animal welfare. Regarding the refinement of experiments involving animals, this study investigated the effects of food deprivation on body...

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Autores principales: Dietze, Silke, Lees, Katarina R., Fink, Heidrun, Brosda, Jan, Voigt, Jörg-Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4730121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26751481
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani6010004
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author Dietze, Silke
Lees, Katarina R.
Fink, Heidrun
Brosda, Jan
Voigt, Jörg-Peter
author_facet Dietze, Silke
Lees, Katarina R.
Fink, Heidrun
Brosda, Jan
Voigt, Jörg-Peter
author_sort Dietze, Silke
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Food deprivation protocols are frequently used in behavioral studies. However, there is limited evidence as to when food deprivation compromises animal welfare. Regarding the refinement of experiments involving animals, this study investigated the effects of food deprivation on body weight loss and behavior in male and female rats. Sex difference in behavior and motivational state after food deprivation is the main finding of the study. The data highlights the need for tailored pilot experiments to evaluate the impact of food deprivation on animals with regard to the 3Rs principles (replacement, reduction, refinement) in animal science. ABSTRACT: In behavioral studies, food deprivation protocols are routinely used to initiate or maintain motivational states that are required in a particular test situation. However, there is limited evidence as to when food deprivation compromises animal welfare. This study investigated the effects of different lengths of food deprivation periods and restricted (fixed-time) feeding on body weight loss as well as anxiety-related and motivated behavior in 5–6 month old male and female Wistar rats. The observed body weight loss was not influenced by sex and ranged between 4% (16 h deprivation) to approximately 9% (fixed-time feeding). Despite significant body weight loss in all groups, the motivation to eat under the aversive test conditions of the modified open field test increased only after 48 h of food deprivation. Long-lasting effects on anxiety as measured in the elevated plus maze test 24 h after refeeding have not been observed, although fixed-time feeding could possibly lead to a lasting anxiogenic effect in female rats. Overall, female rats showed a more anxiolytic profile in both tests when compared to male rats. Despite these sex differences, results suggest that food deprivation is not always paralleled by an increased motivation to feed in a conflict situation. This is an important finding as it highlights the need for tailored pilot experiments to evaluate the impact of food deprivation protocols on animals in regard to the principles of the 3Rs introduced by Russell and Burch.
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spelling pubmed-47301212016-02-11 Food Deprivation, Body Weight Loss and Anxiety-Related Behavior in Rats Dietze, Silke Lees, Katarina R. Fink, Heidrun Brosda, Jan Voigt, Jörg-Peter Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Food deprivation protocols are frequently used in behavioral studies. However, there is limited evidence as to when food deprivation compromises animal welfare. Regarding the refinement of experiments involving animals, this study investigated the effects of food deprivation on body weight loss and behavior in male and female rats. Sex difference in behavior and motivational state after food deprivation is the main finding of the study. The data highlights the need for tailored pilot experiments to evaluate the impact of food deprivation on animals with regard to the 3Rs principles (replacement, reduction, refinement) in animal science. ABSTRACT: In behavioral studies, food deprivation protocols are routinely used to initiate or maintain motivational states that are required in a particular test situation. However, there is limited evidence as to when food deprivation compromises animal welfare. This study investigated the effects of different lengths of food deprivation periods and restricted (fixed-time) feeding on body weight loss as well as anxiety-related and motivated behavior in 5–6 month old male and female Wistar rats. The observed body weight loss was not influenced by sex and ranged between 4% (16 h deprivation) to approximately 9% (fixed-time feeding). Despite significant body weight loss in all groups, the motivation to eat under the aversive test conditions of the modified open field test increased only after 48 h of food deprivation. Long-lasting effects on anxiety as measured in the elevated plus maze test 24 h after refeeding have not been observed, although fixed-time feeding could possibly lead to a lasting anxiogenic effect in female rats. Overall, female rats showed a more anxiolytic profile in both tests when compared to male rats. Despite these sex differences, results suggest that food deprivation is not always paralleled by an increased motivation to feed in a conflict situation. This is an important finding as it highlights the need for tailored pilot experiments to evaluate the impact of food deprivation protocols on animals in regard to the principles of the 3Rs introduced by Russell and Burch. MDPI 2016-01-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4730121/ /pubmed/26751481 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani6010004 Text en © 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons by Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dietze, Silke
Lees, Katarina R.
Fink, Heidrun
Brosda, Jan
Voigt, Jörg-Peter
Food Deprivation, Body Weight Loss and Anxiety-Related Behavior in Rats
title Food Deprivation, Body Weight Loss and Anxiety-Related Behavior in Rats
title_full Food Deprivation, Body Weight Loss and Anxiety-Related Behavior in Rats
title_fullStr Food Deprivation, Body Weight Loss and Anxiety-Related Behavior in Rats
title_full_unstemmed Food Deprivation, Body Weight Loss and Anxiety-Related Behavior in Rats
title_short Food Deprivation, Body Weight Loss and Anxiety-Related Behavior in Rats
title_sort food deprivation, body weight loss and anxiety-related behavior in rats
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4730121/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26751481
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani6010004
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