
Biochemical and Hematologic Reference Intervals for Anesthetized, Female, Juvenile Yorkshire Swine
Author(s) -
Nikolaos Dimitrakakis,
Anna Waterhouse,
Shanda Lightbown,
Daniel C. Leslie,
Amanda Jiang,
Dana E Bolgen,
Kayla Lightbown,
Kelly Cascio,
Gabriela Avilés,
Elizabeth Pollack,
Sam Jurek,
Kathryn Donovan,
Julia Hicks-Berthet,
Kazuo Imaizumi,
Michael Super,
Donald E. Ingber,
Arthur Nedder
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of the american association for laboratory animal science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2769-6677
pISSN - 1559-6109
DOI - 10.30802/aalas-jaalas-21-000014
Subject(s) - juvenile , xenotransplantation , veterinary medicine , medicine , baboon , miniature swine , physiology , reference values , biology , livestock , transplantation , ecology , genetics
Swine are widely used in biomedical research, translational research, xenotransplantation, and agriculture. For these uses, physiologic reference intervals are extremely important for assessing the health status of the swine and diagnosing disease. However, few biochemical and hematologic reference intervals that comply with guidelines from the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute and the American Society for Veterinary Clinical Pathology are available for swine. These guidelines state that reference intervals should be determined by using 120 subjects or more. The aim of this study was to generate hematologic and biochemical reference intervals for female, juvenile Yorkshire swine ( Sus scrofa domesticus ) and to compare these values with those for humans and baboons ( Papio hamadryas ). Blood samples were collected from the femoral artery or vein of female, juvenile Yorkshire swine, and standard hematologic and biochemical parameters were analyzed in multiple studies. Hematologic and biochemical reference intervals were calculated for arterial blood samples from Yorkshire swine ( n = 121 to 124); human and baboon reference intervals were obtained from the literature. Arterial reference intervals for Yorkshire swine differed significantly from those for humans and baboons in all commonly measured parameters except platelet count, which did not differ significantly from the human value, and glucose, which was not significantly different from the baboon value. These data provide valuable information for investigators using female, juvenile Yorkshire swine for biomedical re- search, as disease models, and in xenotransplantation studies as well as useful physiologic information for veterinarians and livestock producers. Our findings highlight the need for caution when comparing data and study outcomes between species.