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Clinical effects of buprenorphine on open field behaviour and gait symmetry in healthy and lame weaned piglets

•Two methods to quantify pain associated with lameness are assessed using the strong analgesic buprenorphine.•Gait asymmetry in lame pigs, measured by kinetic pressure mat analysis, decreased after administering buprenorphine.•Activity in an open field test increased after buprenorphine administrati...

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Published in:The veterinary journal (1997) 2015-12, Vol.206 (3), p.298-303
Main Authors: Meijer, Ellen, van Nes, Arie, Back, Willem, van der Staay, Franz Josef
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Two methods to quantify pain associated with lameness are assessed using the strong analgesic buprenorphine.•Gait asymmetry in lame pigs, measured by kinetic pressure mat analysis, decreased after administering buprenorphine.•Activity in an open field test increased after buprenorphine administration. Lameness in pigs decreases animal welfare and economic profit for the farmer. An important reason for impaired welfare in lame animals is pain due to lameness. No direct measurement of pain is possible in animals, and methods to indirectly detect and quantify the amount of pain an animal is experiencing are urgently needed. In this study, two methods to assess pain associated with lameness in pigs were evaluated to determine if they were sensitive enough to detect a lameness reduction as an effect of an experimental analgesic medication. Asymmetry associated with lameness was objectively quantified using pressure mat kinetic parameters: peak vertical force (PVF), load rate (LR), vertical impulse (VI) and peak vertical pressure (PVP). Locomotor activity was assessed in an open field test. A dose of 0.04 mg/kg buprenorphine, a strong analgesic, was used to treat 10 lame pigs, while eight other lame pigs, treated with physiological saline solution, served as controls. Buprenorphine decreased lameness-associated asymmetry for pressure mat LR (P = 0.002), VI (P = 0.003) and PVP (P = 0.001) and increased activity of the lame pigs in the open field (P = 0.023), while saline-treated animals did not show any changes in asymmetry and became less active in the open field (P 
ISSN:1090-0233
1532-2971
DOI:10.1016/j.tvjl.2015.10.016