Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
 | 
Online Publication Date: 04 Jun 2025

Effect of Mouse (Mus musculus) Sex and C57BL/6 Substrain on Sensitivity to Isoflurane and Ketamine-Xylazine-Acepromazine Anesthesia

VMD,
DVM,
DVM, and
DVM, PhD, DACLAM
Page Range: 1 – 10
DOI: 10.30802/AALAS-JAALAS-25-038
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Anesthesia is commonly performed with mice in the research setting. Standard doses of anesthetic drugs are typically recommended, without customization to strain, substrain, or sex. The purpose of this study was to evaluate C57BL/6 substrain and sex differences in response to isoflurane and ketamine/xylazine/acepromazine (KXA) injectable anesthesia. Female and male C57BL/6NTac, C57BL/6J, C57BL6/6NHsd, and C57BL/6NCrl mice were sourced from 4 different vendors. Isoflurane anesthesia trials were performed with a subset of the mice (n = 24) to determine the minimum alveolar concentration (MAC). Loss of righting reflex, total loss of righting time, time to loss of pedal withdrawal reflex, and total time at surgical plane were evaluated for mice (n = 64) administered 100 mg/kg ketamine, 10 mg/kg xylazine, and 1 mg/kg acepromazine by intraperitoneal injection. Heart rate, respiratory rate, and hemoglobin oxygen saturation (SpO2) were monitored throughout each anesthetic event. Isoflurane MAC was not affected by sex or substrain. In the KXA trials, male mice exhibited a longer duration of loss of righting reflex and remained at a surgical plane of anesthesia significantly longer than the female mice. No significant differences in substrain were detected in the depth or duration of anesthesia. Evaluation of physiologic parameters revealed differences in heart rate between substrains, with C57BL/6NHsd mice exhibiting significantly lower heart rates than the other 3 substrains during both isoflurane and KXA anesthesia. C57BL/6J mice had the highest heart rates during KXA anesthesia. These heart rate differences can impact clinical monitoring practices and are important to consider when selecting strains for study models, especially for cardiovascular studies. In conclusion, the male C57BL/6 mice exhibited a longer duration of anesthesia in response to KXA, while no substrain differences were detected for anesthetic depth or duration of either isoflurane or KXA anesthesia.

Copyright: © American Association for Laboratory Animal Science
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<bold>Figure 1.</bold>
Figure 1.

Graph of the quantal analysis of MAC of isoflurane for each of the substrains and their regression lines. The line at the 50% response rate was used to determine the MAC value for each substrain. Each curve is the percentage of mice from each substrain at a surgical plane of anesthesia at each isoflurane concentration (n = 6 for each substrain except for C57BL/6NHsd, which was n = 5).


<bold>Figure 2.</bold>
Figure 2.

Graph of the quantal analysis of MAC of isoflurane for each sex and their regression lines. The line at the 50% response rate was used to determine the MAC value for each sex. Each curve is the percentage of mice from each sex at a surgical plane of anesthesia at each isoflurane concentration (males: n = 12 and females: n = 11).


<bold>Figure 3.</bold>
Figure 3.

Heart and respiratory rates for each of the 4 substrains of mice over a range of 1.8 to 2.2 isoflurane by C57BL/6 substrain. Results are expressed as mean ± SD (n = 6 for each substrain except for C57BL/6NHsd, which was n = 5).


<bold>Figure 4.</bold>
Figure 4.

Heart rate, respiratory rate, and hemoglobin saturation with oxygen during KXA anesthesia by C57BL/6 substrain. Results are expressed as mean ± SD. (n = 16 mice for each substrain).


Contributor Notes

Corresponding author. Email: marx@upenn.edu

This article contains supplemental materials online.

Received: 24 Feb 2025
Accepted: 05 May 2025
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