Hardback : $214.00
-- This new edition offers significant new information, regarding new technologies like CRISPR-Cas, new housing systems and management practices (including metabolic cages), a table on injection volumes and recommended needle sizes, info on new concepts such as pain assessment by facial expression, possible anesthetic reversal agents, and the potential impact of common procedures on animal welfare. The regulatory section has been entirely updated. The book is now more relevant to an international audience, addressing differing regulations across borders.
-- With the advent of transgenic and other genetic engineering technologies, the versatility and usefulness of the mouse as a model in biomedical research has soared. As a result, mouse colonies everywhere are expanding, and scientists who previously focused on other models are turning their attention to the mouse. These researchers and their lab technicians need a handy, quick and up-to-date reference guide to inform them of best practice when working with these animals.
-- Unlike existing books on laboratory mice, this book focuses not only on veterinary medicine but also offers detailed information regarding management and behavior of mice. It also offers a concise synopsis of material relevant to those working with, and caring for, laboratory mice, making for an easily-used reference.
Show more-- This new edition offers significant new information, regarding new technologies like CRISPR-Cas, new housing systems and management practices (including metabolic cages), a table on injection volumes and recommended needle sizes, info on new concepts such as pain assessment by facial expression, possible anesthetic reversal agents, and the potential impact of common procedures on animal welfare. The regulatory section has been entirely updated. The book is now more relevant to an international audience, addressing differing regulations across borders.
-- With the advent of transgenic and other genetic engineering technologies, the versatility and usefulness of the mouse as a model in biomedical research has soared. As a result, mouse colonies everywhere are expanding, and scientists who previously focused on other models are turning their attention to the mouse. These researchers and their lab technicians need a handy, quick and up-to-date reference guide to inform them of best practice when working with these animals.
-- Unlike existing books on laboratory mice, this book focuses not only on veterinary medicine but also offers detailed information regarding management and behavior of mice. It also offers a concise synopsis of material relevant to those working with, and caring for, laboratory mice, making for an easily-used reference.
Show morePreface. About the Authors. 1. Important Biological Features 2. Husbandry 3. Management 4. Clinical Medicine 5. Preventative Medicine 6. Experimental Methodology 7. Resources and Additional Information 8. Appendix A: Suggested cassette numbering system and some trimming suggestions
Mark A. Suckow is Associate Vice President for Research, Attending Veterinarian, and Professor of Biomedical Engineering at the University of Kentucky, in Lexington, KY. Dr. Suckow earned the degree of Doctor of Veterinary Medicine from the University of Wisconsin in 1987 and completed a post-doctoral residency program in laboratory animal medicine at the University of Michigan in 1990. He is a Diplomate of the American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine. Dr. Suckow has published over 100 scientific papers and chapters in books. He is a Past President of the American Association for Laboratory Animal Science, Past President of the American Society of Laboratory Animal Practitioners, and serves on the Council on Accreditation of AAALAC, International.
Sara Hashway is the Director of the Office of Animal Resources, Attending Veterinarian, and Assistant Research Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of Colorado, Boulder in Boulder, CO. Dr. Hashway earned her veterinary degree from the University of Georgia in 2010 and completed a post-doctoral fellowship in Laboratory Animal Medicine at the University of Michigan in 2013. She is a Diplomate of the American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine and serves as an ad hoc consultant for AAALAC, International. She has published multiple scientific papers and co-authored the chapter "The Translational Potential of Rats" for the third edition of the ACLAM Series book The Laboratory Rat.
Kathleen R. Pritchett-Corning is the Attending Veterinarian and Director, Office of Animal Resources, at the Harvard University Faculty of Arts and Sciences and an Affiliate Assistant Professor in the Department of Comparative Medicine at the University of Washington. Dr. Pritchett-Corning received her B.S. and her D.V.M. from Washington State University and her post-doctoral training from the University of Washington. She became a Diplomate of the American College of Laboratory Animal Medicine in 2002 and has held positions at the University of Washington, the Jackson Laboratory, and Charles River. In 2015, she received the AALAS Pravin Bhatt Scientific Excellence Award. Dr. Pritchett-Corning has worked primarily with mice for 30 years and has authored more than 80 peer-reviewed publications.
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