Literature DB >> 7967459

Reduction of animal use: experimental design and quality of experiments.

M F Festing1.   

Abstract

Poorly designed and analysed experiments can lead to a waste of scientific resources, and may even reach the wrong conclusions. Surveys of published papers by a number of authors have shown that many experiments are poorly analysed statistically, and one survey suggested that about a third of experiments may be unnecessarily large. Few toxicologists attempted to control variability using blocking or covariance analysis. In this study experimental design and statistical methods in 3 papers published in toxicological journals were used as case studies and were examined in detail. The first used dogs to study the effects of ethanol on blood and hepatic parameters following chronic alcohol consumption in a 2 x 4 factorial experimental design. However, the authors used mongrel dogs of both sexes and different ages with a wide range of body weights without any attempt to control the variation. They had also attempted to analyse a factorial design using Student's t-test rather than the analysis of variance. Means of 2 blood parameters presented with one decimal place had apparently been rounded to the nearest 5 units. It is suggested that this experiment could equally well have been done in 3 blocks using 24 instead of 46 dogs. The second case study was an investigation of the response of 2 strains of mice to a toxic agent causing bladder injury. The first experiment involved 40 treatment combinations (2 strains x 4 doses x 5 days) with 3-6 mice per combination. There was no explanation of how the experiment involving approximately 180 mice had actually been done, but unequal subclass numbers suggest that the experiment may have been done on an ad hoc basis rather than being properly designed. It is suggested that the experiment could have been done as 2 blocks involving 80 instead of about 180 mice. The third study again involved a factorial design with 4 dose levels of a compound and 2 sexes, with a total of 80 mice. Open field behaviour was examined. The author incorrectly used the t-test to analyse the data, and concluded that there was no dose effect, when a correct analysis showed this to be highly significant. In all case studies the scientists presented means +/- standard deviations or standard errors involving only the animals contributing to that mean, rather than the much better estimates that would be obtained with a pooled estimate of error. This is virtually a universal practice.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7967459     DOI: 10.1258/002367794780681697

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lab Anim        ISSN: 0023-6772            Impact factor:   2.471


  25 in total

1.  Ivan P. Pavlov's view on vivisection.

Authors:  R A Kopaladze
Journal:  Integr Physiol Behav Sci       Date:  2000 Oct-Dec

2.  Recovery of motor deficit, cerebellar serotonin and lipid peroxidation levels in the cortex of injured rats.

Authors:  Antonio Bueno-Nava; Rigoberto Gonzalez-Pina; Alfonso Alfaro-Rodriguez; Vladimir Nekrassov-Protasova; Alfredo Durand-Rivera; Sergio Montes; Fructuoso Ayala-Guerrero
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2010-06-10       Impact factor: 3.996

3.  Sensorimotor Intervention Recovers Noradrenaline Content in the Dentate Gyrus of Cortical Injured Rats.

Authors:  Laura E Ramos-Languren; Gabriela García-Díaz; Angélica González-Maciel; Laura E Rosas-López; Antonio Bueno-Nava; Alberto Avila-Luna; Hayde Ramírez-Anguiano; Rigoberto González-Piña
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2016-09-17       Impact factor: 3.996

4.  Systematic heterogenization for better reproducibility in animal experimentation.

Authors:  S Helene Richter
Journal:  Lab Anim (NY)       Date:  2017-08-31       Impact factor: 12.625

5.  GABAergic imbalance is normalized by dopamine D1 receptor activation in the striatum contralateral to the cortical injury in motor deficit-recovered rats.

Authors:  Arturo Gálvez-Rosas; Alberto Avila-Luna; Margarita Valdés-Flores; Sergio Montes; Antonio Bueno-Nava
Journal:  Psychopharmacology (Berl)       Date:  2019-03-11       Impact factor: 4.530

6.  Benefits of a factorial design focusing on inclusion of female and male animals in one experiment.

Authors:  Thorsten Buch; Katharina Moos; Filipa M Ferreira; Holger Fröhlich; Catherine Gebhard; Achim Tresch
Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)       Date:  2019-04-13       Impact factor: 4.599

7.  D1 Antagonists and D2 Agonists Have Opposite Effects on the Metabolism of Dopamine in the Rat Striatum.

Authors:  Alberto Avila-Luna; Jacqueline Prieto-Leyva; Arturo Gálvez-Rosas; Alfonso Alfaro-Rodriguez; Rigoberto Gonzalez-Pina; Antonio Bueno-Nava
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2015-05-17       Impact factor: 3.996

8.  Maternal Weight Gain as a Predictor of Litter Size in Swiss Webster, C57BL/6J, and BALB/cJ mice.

Authors:  James B Finlay; Xueli Liu; Richard W Ermel; Trinka W Adamson
Journal:  J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci       Date:  2015-11       Impact factor: 1.232

9.  Dopamine D1 receptor activation maintains motor coordination and balance in rats.

Authors:  Alberto Avila-Luna; Arturo Gálvez-Rosas; Alfredo Durand-Rivera; Laura-Elisa Ramos-Languren; Camilo Ríos; José-Antonio Arias-Montaño; Antonio Bueno-Nava
Journal:  Metab Brain Dis       Date:  2017-10-19       Impact factor: 3.584

10.  Optimization of high-density cDNA-microarray protocols by 'design of experiments'.

Authors:  Gunnar Wrobel; Joerg Schlingemann; Lars Hummerich; Heidi Kramer; Peter Lichter; Meinhard Hahn
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2003-06-15       Impact factor: 16.971

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