| Literature DB >> 33659401 |
Patricia Prada-Dacasa1,2, Andrea Urpi2, Laura Sánchez-Benito1,2, Patrizia Bianchi2, Albert Quintana1,2.
Abstract
Respiratory dysfunction is among the main cause of severe and fatal pathologies worldwide. The use of effective experimental models and methodologies for the study of the pulmonary pathophysiology is necessary to prevent, control and cure these diseases. Plethysmography, a technique for the assessment of lung function, has been widely applied in mice for the characterization of respiratory physiology. However, classical plethysmography methods present technical limitations such as the use of anesthesia and animal immobilization. Whole-body plethysmography (WBP) avoids these issues providing a non-invasive approach for the assessment of the respiratory function in conscious animals. WBP relies on the recording of pressure changes that are produced by the spontaneous breathing activity of an animal placed inside an airtight chamber. During normal respiration, pressure variation is directly proportional to the respiratory pattern of the animal allowing the measurement of the respiratory rate and tidal volume. These parameters are commonly used to evaluate pulmonary function in different physiological and disease models. In contrast to classical plethysmography methods, WBP technique allows reproducible serial measurements as it avoids animal restraint or the use of anesthesia. These key features rend WBP a suitable approach for longitudinal studies allowing the assessment of progressive respiratory alterations in physiological and pathological conditions. This protocol describes the procedures for the measurement of the breathing patterns in mice using the WBP method, the data analysis and results interpretation.Entities:
Keywords: Breathing; Conscious; Mouse; Non-invasive; Respiration; Tidal Volume; Unrestrained; Whole-body Plethysmography
Year: 2020 PMID: 33659401 PMCID: PMC7842655 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.3741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bio Protoc ISSN: 2331-8325