4.4 Article

Comparative study of tricaine methanesulfonate (MS-222) and eugenol as euthanasia agents in zebrafish (Danio rerio) as an experimental model

Journal

LABORATORY ANIMALS
Volume 57, Issue 3, Pages 236-246

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/00236772221143939

Keywords

Eugenol; euthanasia; fish; MS-222; refinement

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In animal experiments, measures should be taken to minimize pain and suffering while obtaining accurate experimental results. This study compares the efficacy of eugenol and MS-222 as euthanasia agents in zebrafish and evaluates their effects. Eugenol is found to be a stronger euthanasia agent, but it also causes branchial alterations and nerve tissue changes. MS-222 with a buffer enhances effectiveness and reduces severity of lesions, making it the most effective and safest euthanasia method for zebrafish research.
In experimental procedures inevitably leading to the sacrifice of animals, suitable measures should be taken to minimise their pain and suffering as much as possible, as well as to prevent any modification or masking in the experimental results obtained. An overdose of anaesthetic is the method of euthanasia most employed in fish, since it is effective and easy to apply. Our objectives were to compare the efficacy of eugenol and of tricaine methanesulfonate (MS-222) as euthanasia agents in zebrafish, and to make a histological evaluation of the possible effects derived from their application. The concentrations established for eugenol were 0.25 and 0.35 mg/mL, and those for MS-222 were 0.25 and 0.50 mg/mL, for both the buffered solution and the non-buffered one. Eugenol turned out to be a stronger euthanasia agent than MS-222 in zebrafish, presenting with significantly shorter euthanasia times. However, the exposure of the fish to euthanasia doses of eugenol triggered branchial alterations, in addition to serious lesions and changes in their nerve tissue. The results obtained with MS-222 also revealed a marked branchial alteration derived from its use. In this respect, the addition of a buffer to the MS-222 solution enhanced the effectiveness of the drug, with significantly shorter euthanasia times being achieved than with the non-buffered solution, and diminished the severity of the lesions described. We therefore determined that the buffered MS-222 solution is the most effective, reliable and safest method of euthanasia for use in research on zebrafish.

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