» Articles » PMID: 36034474

The Use of Alfaxalone for Short-term Anesthesia Can Confound Serum Progesterone Measurements in the Common Marmoset: a Case Report

Overview
Journal Primate Biol
Date 2022 Aug 29
PMID 36034474
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Alfaxan (alfaxalone) is a steroid general anesthetic widely used in veterinary medicine for induction and maintenance of anesthesia in several species. While the use of alfaxalone in veterinary practice has several benefits compared to the use of other anesthetic agents, the fact that it is derived from progesterone may confound the measurement of the latter in the blood of animals under alfaxalone treatment. In the present case study, we report the measurement of serum progesterone in an individual common marmoset () during five ovarian cycles in which luteolysis was induced by PGF2 . Blood samples were usually taken from the awake animal with the exception of the fifth cycle in which the sample was collected under alfaxalone anesthesia in connection with a tooth extraction. In contrast to the previous four cycles in which luteolysis resulted in the expected marked decrease in progesterone concentrations, the - apparent - progesterone level in the cycle under alfaxalone treatment remained unexpectedly high. Cross-reactivity of the non-specific antibody used in the progesterone assay with alfaxalone most likely explains this finding.

Citing Articles

Physiological effects of alfaxalone anesthesia on rhesus monkeys during intravenous glucose tolerance testing.

Vaughan K, Toepfer K, Mattison J PLoS One. 2024; 19(7):e0308007.

PMID: 39058717 PMC: 11280158. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0308007.


In vitro matured oocytes have a higher developmental potential than in vivo matured oocytes after hormonal ovarian stimulation in Callithrix jacchus.

Tkachenko O, Kahland T, Lindenwald D, Heistermann M, Drummer C, Daskalaki M J Ovarian Res. 2024; 17(1):120.

PMID: 38824584 PMC: 11144324. DOI: 10.1186/s13048-024-01441-0.

References
1.
Drummer C, Vogt E, Heistermann M, Roshani B, Becker T, Matz-Rensing K . Generation and Breeding of -Transgenic Marmoset Monkeys: Cell Chimerism and Implications for Disease Modeling. Cells. 2021; 10(3). PMC: 7996964. DOI: 10.3390/cells10030505. View

2.
Bertrand H, Sandersen C, Murray J, Flecknell P . A combination of alfaxalone, medetomidine and midazolam for the chemical immobilization of Rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta): Preliminary results. J Med Primatol. 2017; 46(6):332-336. DOI: 10.1111/jmp.12315. View

3.
White K, Yates D . Clinical comparison of alfaxalone, ketamine and propofol following medetomidine and methadone in dogs. Vet Anaesth Analg. 2017; 44(5):1027-1034. DOI: 10.1016/j.vaa.2016.12.057. View

4.
Ferre P, Pasloske K, Whittem T, Ranasinghe M, Li Q, Lefebvre H . Plasma pharmacokinetics of alfaxalone in dogs after an intravenous bolus of Alfaxan-CD RTU. Vet Anaesth Analg. 2006; 33(4):229-36. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-2995.2005.00264.x. View

5.
Casoni D, Amen E, Brecheisen M, Kuennecke B, Muggler T, Bergadano A . A combination of alfaxalone and medetomidine followed by an alfaxalone continuous rate infusion in cynomolgus monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) undergoing pharmacoMRS. Vet Anaesth Analg. 2015; 42(5):552-4. DOI: 10.1111/vaa.12267. View