| Literature DB >> 36207428 |
Jack Korenyi-Both1, Jorge Vidaurre2, Tim Held2, Magnus R Campler1, Justin Kieffer3, Ting-Yu Cheng1, Steven J Moeller3, Andrew S Bowman1, Andréia G Arruda4.
Abstract
The United States' swine industry is under constant threat of foreign animal diseases, which may emerge without warning due to the globalized transportation networks moving people, animals, and products. Therefore, having disease control and elimination protocols in place prior to pathogen introduction is paramount for business continuity and economic recovery. During extraordinary circumstances, it may become necessary to depopulate large populations of animals, including swine, as a disease containment measure. Currently approved depopulation methods for swine present significant logistical challenges when scaled to large populations or performed in field conditions. In the United States, water-based foam is currently approved for poultry depopulation, and recent field studies demonstrate water-based foam is an effective depopulation alternative for swine. While effective, the speed at which water-based foam induces loss of consciousness prior to death, a major welfare consideration, has not been adequately investigated. In this study, 12 nursery pigs were terminated using water-based medium-expansion foam to quantify the time to induce loss of consciousness and ultimately brain death. Each pig was implanted with subdermal electrodes to capture electroencephalographic data, placed in a body sling, and suspended in a plastic bulk container that was subsequently filled with water-based foam. Electroencephalographic data was recorded for 15 min, during which the pigs remained immersed in the water-based foam. Conservatively, average (± SD) time to unconsciousness and brain death was 1 min, 53 s ± 36 s and 3 min, 3 s ± 56 s, respectively. The relatively rapid loss of consciousness compared to other methods limits the amount of distress and is overall a positive finding for the welfare of the pigs that might be depopulated with water-based foam. The findings of this study add additional evidence supporting the use of water-based medium-expansion foam for an emergency depopulation of swine.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 36207428 PMCID: PMC9546833 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-21353-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1(a) Dorsal view of pig showing electrode placement in a six-channel montage (L1, L2, R1, R2, G = ground, R = reference). (b) Lateral view of the pig showing orientation of the sling for body support and connections used to suspend the pig within the container throughout the 15 min water-based foaming event. (a) and (b) were created using Adobe Illustrator v25.4.1 and Adobe Photoshop v22.5.4 (www.adobe.com).
Figure 2(a) Compressed EEG (4 min, 20 s) on one of the pigs, demonstrating baseline EEG before intervention (“Baseline EEG”), movement artifact, transitional and isoelectric EEG. Movement artifact showed a continuous and intermittent component. The EEG became transitional immediately after movement stopped and shifted rapidly to an isoelectric pattern. High pass filter: 0.1, Low pass filter: 15 Hz. (b) EEG showing high amplitude low frequency (HALF) EEG activity observed during the intermittent component of movement artifact in all pigs. High pass filter: 0.1, Low pass filter: 15 Hz. (a) and (b) were created using Persyst software version 13 rev. D (Persyst, Solana Beach, CA, USA; https://www.persyst.com/).
Objective data from each animal including sex, weight, and time in each EEG phase with averages in the bottom row.
| Subject | Sex | Weight (kg) | Delay in onset of movement (m:ss) | Movement artifact (m:ss) | Intermittent transitional EEG (m:ss ) | Intermittent normal EEG (m:ss) | Transitional EEG (m:ss) | Isoelectric EEG (m:ss) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pig 1 | F | 15.47 | 0:12 | 2:38 | 0:51 | 11:35 | ||
| Pig 2 | F | 13.29 | 0:10 | 1:11 | 1:15 | 12:16 | ||
| Pig 3 | F | 15.46 | 0:37 | 1:03 | 0:46 | 0:10 | 0:28 | 8:42 |
| Pig 4 | F | 13.40 | 0:12 | 1:24 | 0:28 | 10:17 | ||
| Pig 5 | F | 12.91 | 0:00 | 1:16 | 2:19 | 6:57 | ||
| Pig 6 | F | 11.65 | 0:17 | 1:22 | 2:14 | 11:04 | ||
| Pig 7 | M | 15.01 | 0:08 | 1:56 | 1:41 | 8:16 | ||
| Pig 8 | M | 13.04 | 0:05 | 1:12 | 0:19 | 13:49 | ||
| Pig 9 | M | 13.39 | 0:00 | 1:52 | 0:38 | 9:50 | ||
| Pig 10 | M | 12.91 | 0:00 | 1:29 | 0:01 | 1:26 | 7:24 | |
| Pig 11 | M | 13.10 | 0:02 | 2:55 | 1:55 | 8:04 | ||
| Pig 12 | M | 12.93 | 0:24 | 1:18 | 0:27 | 10:06 | ||
| Average | 13.55 | 0:11 | 1:38 | 1:10 | 9:52 |