3.8 Article

Establishment of a Novel Method for Spinal Discectomy Surgery in Elderly Rats in an In Vivo Spinal Fusion Model

Journal

METHODS AND PROTOCOLS
Volume 4, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/mps4040079

Keywords

spine; spinal fusion; rat; animal experiment; rat anaesthesia; rat surgery; standard operating procedure; SOP; bone morphogenetic proteins

Funding

  1. Swiss orthopaedics foundation
  2. clinical trials unit (CTU) of the Inselspital Bern
  3. Robert Mathys Foundation [E19_0003]

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This study aimed to develop a Standard Operating Procedure for spinal tail disc surgery in elderly Wistar rats, including preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative surgical setups, as well as specific anaesthesia and pain management protocols. By implementing this optimized SOP, successful spinal surgery in elderly rats was achieved with no complications, improving transparency, reproducibility, and external validity in experimental rat spinal surgery.
The rat model is a common model for intervertebral disc (IVD) and spinal research. However, complications remain challenging. Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) are validated methods to minimize complications and improve safety and quality of studies. However, a SOP for rat spinal fusion surgery has been missing until now. Therefore, the aim of the study was to develop a SOP for spinal tail disc surgery in elderly Wistar rats (419.04 +/- 54.84 g). An initial preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative surgical setup, including specific anaesthesia and pain management protocols, was developed. Anaesthesia was induced by subcutaneous injection of a pre-mixture of fentanyl, midazolam, and medetomidin with the addition of 0.5% isoflurane in oxygen and caudal epidural analgesia. The surgery itself consisted of the fixation of a customized external ring fixator with 0.8 mm Kirschner wires at the proximal rat tail and a discectomy and replacement with bone morphogenetic protein coated beta-tricalcium-phosphate carrier. The postoperative setup included heating, analgesia with buprenorphine, and meloxicam, as well as special supplementary food. Anaesthesia, surgery, and pain management were sufficient. In the presented optimized SOP, no animals developed any complications. A SOP for spinal surgery in elderly rats in an in vivo spinal fusion model was developed successfully. This novel protocol can improve transparency, reproducibility, and external validity in experimental rat spinal surgery experiments.

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