Noninvasive method for electrocardiogram recording in conscious rodents with the electro-conductive liquid electrodes
Valery N. Mukhin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a noninvasive, stress-free method for recording heart rate in conscious rodents using liquid electrodes, enabling better analysis of heart rate variability without extensive preparation or anesthesia.
Contribution
The authors developed a novel liquid electrode-based ECG recording technique that minimizes animal stress and preparation, improving heart rate variability studies in rodents.
Findings
Allows ECG recording without anesthesia or extensive preparation
Enables accurate heart rate variability analysis in conscious rodents
Uses simple liquid electrodes with minimal animal disturbance
Abstract
Existing methods of heart rate recording in animals have shortcomings, which significantly obscure the influence of experimental factors on heart rate. We have developed a method of electrocardiographic recording of heart rate in rats without these drawbacks. To contact the animal limbs used liquid electrodes which are two small baths filled with conductive fluid (saline solution). To provide the relative immobility (and quiet) of the animal the two baths was covered with a dark chamber without a bottom and with an entrance for the rat. During the experiment, a rat placed near the chamber comes into it (for the innate preference for darkness) and locates itself inside with its head for the exit. At that moment ECG recording starts. This method allows to record heart rate in the intact rodents (without anesthesia and stress) and does not require substantial preparation. It is not…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHeart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control · Advanced Chemical Sensor Technologies · Cardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmias
