In the last two decades, animal models have become important tools in understanding and treating pain, and in predicting analgesic efficacy. Although rodent models retain a dominant role in the study of pain mechanisms, large animal models may predict human biology and pharmacology in certain pain conditions more accurately. Taking into consideration the anatomical and physiological characteristics common to man and pigs (median body size, digestive apparatus, number, size, distribution and communication of vessels in dermal skin, epidermal-dermal junctions, the immunoreactivity of peptide nerve fibers, distribution of nociceptive and non-nociceptive fiber classes, and changes in axonal excitability), swines seem to provide the most suitabl...
The detection and assessment of pain in animals is crucial to improving their welfare in a variety o...
Lameness in pigs decreases animal welfare and economic profit for the farmer. An important reason fo...
Ensuring that laboratory rodent pain is well managed underpins the ethical acceptability of working ...
In the last two decades, animal models have become important tools in understanding and treating pai...
Abstract: Despite the myriad promising new targets and candidate analgesics recently identified in p...
The study of pain in awake animals raises ethical, philosophical, and technical problems. We review ...
Despite a long history of debate about negative affective states in animals, it was only in the last...
Assessing and measuring post-operative pain in all animals is a challenge, but doing it in small mam...
With the loss of work days, the price of health care and payments for compensation, litigation, and ...
One of the biggest challenges for analgesic drug development is how to decide if a potential analges...
Background and Purpose: Animal models are a necessity in the study of neuropathic pain, and much of ...
Pain recognition, prevention and alleviation in research animals is important from an animal welfare...
Background: The quantification of pain intensity in vivo is essential for identifying the mechanisms...
One important requirement for animal welfare is to maintain animals free from pain, injury or diseas...
This Topical review considers the misalignment between outcome measures traditionally reported in an...
The detection and assessment of pain in animals is crucial to improving their welfare in a variety o...
Lameness in pigs decreases animal welfare and economic profit for the farmer. An important reason fo...
Ensuring that laboratory rodent pain is well managed underpins the ethical acceptability of working ...
In the last two decades, animal models have become important tools in understanding and treating pai...
Abstract: Despite the myriad promising new targets and candidate analgesics recently identified in p...
The study of pain in awake animals raises ethical, philosophical, and technical problems. We review ...
Despite a long history of debate about negative affective states in animals, it was only in the last...
Assessing and measuring post-operative pain in all animals is a challenge, but doing it in small mam...
With the loss of work days, the price of health care and payments for compensation, litigation, and ...
One of the biggest challenges for analgesic drug development is how to decide if a potential analges...
Background and Purpose: Animal models are a necessity in the study of neuropathic pain, and much of ...
Pain recognition, prevention and alleviation in research animals is important from an animal welfare...
Background: The quantification of pain intensity in vivo is essential for identifying the mechanisms...
One important requirement for animal welfare is to maintain animals free from pain, injury or diseas...
This Topical review considers the misalignment between outcome measures traditionally reported in an...
The detection and assessment of pain in animals is crucial to improving their welfare in a variety o...
Lameness in pigs decreases animal welfare and economic profit for the farmer. An important reason fo...
Ensuring that laboratory rodent pain is well managed underpins the ethical acceptability of working ...