| Literature DB >> 27243026 |
Merel Verhoeven1, Marien Gerritzen2, Antonio Velarde3, Ludo Hellebrekers4, Bas Kemp5.
Abstract
Exposure to CO2 at high concentration is a much debated stunning method in pigs. Pigs respond aversively to high concentrations of CO2, and there is uncertainty about what behaviors occur before and after loss of consciousness. The aim was to assess timing of unconsciousness in pigs during exposure to high concentrations of CO2 based on changes in electroencephalogram (EEG) activity and the relation with the behaviors sniffing, retreat and escape attempts, lateral head movements, jumping, muscular contractions, loss of posture, and gasping. Pigs (108 ± 9 kg) were randomly assigned to 80% CO2 (80C, n = 24) or 95% CO2 (95C, n = 24). The time at which the gondola started descending into the well pre-filled with 80C or 95C was marked as T = 0. The CO2 exposure lasted 346 s after which the corneal reflex and breathing were assessed for 1 min. Visual assessment of changes in the amplitude and frequency of EEG traces after T = 0 was used to determine loss of consciousness. Time to loss of consciousness was longer in 80C pigs (47 ± 6 s) than in 95C pigs (33 ± 7 s). Time to an iso-electric EEG was similar in 80C pigs (75 ± 23 s) and 95C pigs (64 ± 32 s). When pigs descended into the well, the earlier entry of 95C pigs into high CO2 atmosphere rather than the concentration of CO2 by itself affected the latency of behavioral responses and decreasing brain activity. During exposure to the gas, 80C and 95C pigs exhibited sniffing, retreat attempts, lateral head movements, jumping, and gasping before loss of consciousness. 95C pigs exhibited all these behaviors on average earlier than 80C pigs after T = 0. But the interval between onset of these behaviors and loss of consciousness and the duration of these behaviors, except gasping, was similar for both treatments. Loss of posture was on average observed in both groups 10 s before EEG-based loss of consciousness. Furthermore, 88% of 80C pigs and 94% of 95C pigs demonstrated muscular contractions before loss of consciousness. The findings provide little reason to conclude on a behavioral basis that these atmospheres are greatly different in their impact on pig welfare.Entities:
Keywords: animal welfare; behavior; carbon dioxide; electroencephalogram; pigs; stunning
Year: 2016 PMID: 27243026 PMCID: PMC4871862 DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2016.00038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Vet Sci ISSN: 2297-1769
Figure 1Weighing scale in which the pigs were fixated (A) to equip them with EEG-recording equipment and a respiratory band. Placement of the four electrodes on the pigs head (B).
Ethogram used to score the behaviors of pigs in an ascending and descending gondola into a well filled with atmospheric air on days 1 and 2 and 80 or 95% carbon dioxide (CO.
| Behavior (event) | Description |
|---|---|
| Sniffing | Sniffing while lifting the head and considered a first sign of the pig becoming aware of the CO2 |
| Retreat attempts | Pigs backing away ( |
| Gasping | A very deep breath through a wide open mouth that may involve stretching of the neck ( |
| Escape attempts | Pigs running across the gondola and/or raising their forelegs on the side wall of the gondola ( |
| Jumping | Jumping in air or against the wall of the gondola |
| Lateral head movements | Head movements to the side while convulsive expulsion of air from the lungs through the nose and mouth ( |
| Muscular contractions | Defined as a period of struggling ranging from fairly vigorous running and movements to clonic convulsive seizures ( |
| Loss of posture | The pig is in a recumbent position with total loss of control of posture |
| Standing | The pig is in an upright position, without moving, with all four paws on the floor |
| Walking | The pig moves in a forward direction |
| Sitting | The pig is in a sitting position |
| Lying | The pig is in a recumbent position, still having (partially) control of posture (it may lift the head) |
Figure 2Representative examples of the different stages identified with visual assessment of electroencephalogram (EEG) activity prior to and after CO. The three stages from left to right: baseline (A), unconscious (B), and minimal brain activity (C). Total X-axis represents 5 s, Y-axis represents amplitude of the EEG-trace (microvolts).
CO.
| Level of the sensor | Treatment | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Time (s) | 80C (%) | 95C (%) | |
| 0 m (top) | 0 | 1.5 | 24.5 |
| 0.5 m | 4 | 2.7 | 74.0 |
| 1 m | 8 | 7.5 | 88.2 |
| 2 m | 16 | 70.2 | 96.0 |
| 2.5 m | 23 | 79.4 | 96.9 |
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Latency to first, duration of (mean ± SD), and number of behaviors observed in pigs exposed to 80% CO.
| Behavior | 80% CO2 | 95% CO2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean ± SD | Mean ± SD | |||
| Duration of standing (s) | 24/24 | 31 ± 6a | 24/24 | 15 ± 4b |
| Latency to first walking (s) | 12/24 | 6 ± 9 | 14/24 | 9 ± 5 |
| Duration of walking (s) | 12/24 | 5 ± 3 | 14/24 | 2 ± 1 |
| Latency to first sitting (s) | 12/24 | 31 ± 3a | 12/24 | 14 ± 5b |
| Duration of sitting (s) | 12/24 | 3 ± 2 | 12/24 | 3 ± 3 |
| Latency to first lying (s) | 24/24 | 34 ± 5a | 24/24 | 17 ± 3b |
| Duration of lying (s) | 24/24 | 310 ± 5a | 24/24 | 328 ± 3b |
| Sniffing (s) | 24/24 | 18 ± 3a | 24/24 | 7 ± 2b |
| Latency to first retreat attempt (s) | 22/24 | 22 ± 6a | 20/24 | 10 ± 4b |
| Number of retreat attempts | 22/24 | 2 ± 1 | 20/24 | 2 ± 1 |
| Latency to first gasp (s) | 24/24 | 23 ± 4a | 24/24 | 9 ± 3b |
| Number of gasps | 24/24 | 30 ± 9a | 24/24 | 14 ± 3b |
| Latency to first lateral head movement (s) | 8/24 | 24 ± 10 | 12/24 | 14 ± 6 |
| Number of lateral head movements | 8/24 | 2 ± 1 | 12/24 | 1 ± 1 |
| Latency to first jump (s) | 12/24 | 34 ± 5a | 11/24 | 14 ± 2b |
| Number of jumps | 12/24 | 1 ± 1 | 11/24 | 2 ± 2 |
| Latency to first muscular contraction (s) | 21/24 | 36 ± 4a | 24/24 | 20 ± 6b |
| Number of muscular contractions | 21/24 | 4 ± 2 | 24/24 | 3 ± 2 |
| Loss of posture (s) | 24/24 | 44 ± 5a | 24/24 | 26 ± 5b |
| Number of escape attempts | 0/24 | – | 0/24 | – |
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T = 0 is start descending of the gondola into the well.
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Figure 3Average latency (s) to the different behaviors expressed by pigs exposed to 80% CO. T = 0 indicates start descending of the gondola into the well pre-filled with CO2. The actual CO2 concentration was measured once at five different time points during descending of the gondola into the well.
Figure 4Range of individual time points at which the different behaviors occurred in relation to EEG-based loss of unconscious (. Dotted lines indicate average values of all observations and left and right vertical lines of each block indicate minimum and maximum values for all observations.