Effects of vasectomy surgery and meloxicam treatment on faecal corticosterone levels and behaviour in two strains of laboratory mouse

Abstract
. Peak corticosterone levels were significantly higher in mice that underwent vasectomy and received saline (p < 0.001) or meloxicam at 5 or 10 mg kg−1 (p = 0.021, and p < 0.001, respectively) compared with normal un-operated controls. Mice that underwent vasectomy and received 20 mg kg−1 meloxicam had peak corticosterone levels that were not different from normal un-operated mice (p = 0.254). Discriminant analysis was used to identify behaviours responsible for group separation; these were summed to create two behaviour scores. Score 2 (the frequency of flinching, writhing, rear leg lift and press 2) was thought to be pain related; mice that underwent vasectomy and received saline exhibited significantly more of these behaviours than the normal controls (p = 0.032), and the mice that received meloxicam (at any dose). Strain differences were observed in both the stress response to vasectomy and the behavioural changes; the C3H/HeN mice had higher pain scores (behaviour Score 2) and peak corticosterone responses than the C57BL/6JCrl mice. We have demonstrated that significant changes occur in the behaviour of mice following vasectomy, and these changes are reduced by use of meloxicam. Vasectomy elicits a rise in corticosterone levels that was only reduced by the highest dose of meloxicam....

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