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Template for Carbon Dioxide Euthanasia of Rodents
Purpose
Rodents must be euthanized by trained personnel using appropriate techniques, equipment and agents. This is necessary to ensure a painless death that satisfies research requirements. Death should be induced as painlessly and quickly as possible. Upon completion of the procedure, death must be confirmed by an appropriate method, such as ascertaining cardiac and respiratory arrest or noting an animal's fixed and dilated pupils. Euthanasia should not be performed in the animal room. The euthanasia method must be appropriate to the species, approved in the animal study proposal and conform to the most recent Report of the AVMA Panel on Euthanasia. 

Guidelines

Template
Animals are euthanized in a chamber permitting observation of them during the euthanasia process. The chamber is connected to a tank of compressed carbon dioxide equipped with a regulator. The carbon dioxide flow rate is adjusted to 10% of the chamber volume per minute until the animals are observed to lose consciousness. After this point a maximal flow rate may be used if desired. Adult rodents are exposed to 100% CO2 for 5+ minutes; preweaning rodents are exposed for 20+ minutes. After CO2 exposure animals are returned to room air and rechecked after 5 minutes. Animals that have revived are reexposed to CO2 or euthanized by another method. Alternatively, a physical method such as decapitation, exsanguination or creation of a pneumothorax may be used immediately after the animals are removed from the CO2 chamber to ensure death.
 References
- Danneman PJ, Stein S, Walshaw SO. Humane and practical implications f using carbon dioxide mixed with oxygen for anesthesia or euthanasia of rats . Lab Anim Sci 1997, 47:376-385.
- AVMA Panel on Euthanasia. 2000 Report of the AVMA Panel on Euthanasia . J Am Vet Med Assoc 2001, 218:669-696.
- Guidelines for the Euthanasia of Mouse and Rat Fetuses and Neonates .
- NIH Animal Research Advisory Committee, 2001 (see web site: http://oacu.od.nih.gov/ARAC/ euthmous.htm).
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