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Pain at the Slaughterhouse in Ruminants with a Focus on the Neurobiology of Sensitisation

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ANIMALS
卷 11, 期 4, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani11041085

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pain; abattoir; sensitisation; stunning; cattle; river buffalo; animal welfare; Halal; Shechita; Kosher

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Based on a neurobiological examination, events around the time of slaughter have the potential to intensify the animal's pain response through processes of sensitisation and enhanced transmission. Despite limited evidence, the analogy with human neurobiology literature suggests a plausible connection, and further dedicated study is needed to confirm the postulated link between events at slaughter and processes of hypersensitisation.
Simple Summary We pose based on a fundamental science examination that events that occur around the time of slaughter have the potential to intensify the pain response, through a process called sensitisation, or an exaggerated response to painful stimuli. Health conditions which result in inflammation, injuries arising from transport and handling and exaggerated fear responses may all be present at the slaughterhouse. Whilst there is limited evidence of a direct effect of these on the processes of sensitisation in animals at slaughter, by analogy with the human neurobiology literature the connection seems plausible. In this review we outline the biology of such a response, and the rationale for suggestion of a possible linkage between events at slaughter and a heightened animal pain response. We pose, based on a neurobiological examination, that events that occur around the time of slaughter have the potential to intensify the pain response, through the processes of sensitisation and enhanced transmission. Sensitisation, or an enhanced response to painful stimuli, is a well-discussed phenomenon in the human medical literature, which can arise from previous injury to an area, inflammatory reactions, or previous overstimulation of the stress axes. A number of events that occur prior to arrival at, or in the slaughterhouse, may lead to presence of these factors. This includes previous on-farm pathology, injuries arising from transport and handling and lack of habituation to humans. Whilst there is limited evidence of a direct effect of these on the processes of sensitisation in animals at slaughter, by analogy with the human neurobiology literature the connection seems plausible. In this review a neurobiological approach is taken to discuss this hypothesis in the light of basic science, and extrapolations from existing literature on the slaughter of ruminants. To confirm the postulated link between events at slaughter, and processes of hypersensitisation, further dedicated study is required.

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