13-Experimental procedures

The division of labour, costs and responsibility between the facility and scientists regarding the recording of observations on the animals must be discussed at a very early stage. Novel routines for these observations, including the production of scoring sheets, may have to be developed. Procedures must be described in sufficient detail to enable them to be assessed.

General principles
For fish researchers

Administration techniques

  • Consideration of species-specific guidelines for administration of substances, including the likely stress caused by handling and immobilisation. Traumatic injuries to the skin are particularly common in fish. Where at all possible, substances should be administered in connection with a pleasurable activity such as feeding, rather than as an isolated negative event.
  • Evaluation of the potential effect at the injection site, including methods to refine the injection such as the use of smaller needles, local anaesthetic cream, buffered solutions, liquids at body temperature and the avoidance of incorrect deposition of the injectate
  • An assessment of the likely effect of the injection volume on circulatory, renal and pulmonary function
  • The timing, order of treatment and length of the administration process, to avoid introducing temporal artefacts and treatment bias caused by the animal's temperament, particularly if multiple measurements are to be made in the presence of other animals. The effects of performing tasks on different weekdays, when they may be very different routines and activity levels in a facility, should also be considered, since animals adapt quickly to these routines.
  • The possible effects of differences in competence levels between personnel
  • The possible secondary effects of a treatment, such as loss of body weight or muscle mass, and interference from co-habitants
  • The appearance of sham-treated animals, to avoid observer bias


Links to resources on administration and sampling

General or collective guidance:

Species-specific guidance:


Blood sampling techniques

  • Knowledge of the total circulating blood volume of the animal
  • Consideration of species-specific guidelines for blood sampling and choice of the most refined method
  • Assessment of the likely consequences of blood removal (including the stress of handling)
  • Consideration of steps that can be taken to minimise residual bleeding (within or outside the animal) after the sample has been taken.


Links to resources on blood sampling


Sedation, anaesthesia and analgesia


Advice on reducing hypothermia in small rodents


Other resources

Please see the section on Educational Courses, including a link to WASP Science.

The principles embodied in the WHO Guidelines for Safe Surgery are highly recommended, even though they were developed for human surgery. See also The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande about the development of these guidelines. This book also contains a useful checklist for constructing checklists.

See also the other sections of the PREPARE guidelines in the menu at the top of this page. They include Section 9 on Test substances and procedures, Section 10 on Experimental Animals and Section 12 on Housing and Husbandry.

This page was updated on 01 November 2024

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