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A statistical analysis of murine incisional and excisional acute wound models.


ABSTRACT: Mice represent the most commonly used species for preclinical in vivo research. While incisional and excisional acute murine wound models are both frequently employed, there is little agreement on which model is optimum. Moreover, current lack of standardization of wounding procedure, analysis time point(s), method of assessment, and the use of individual wounds vs. individual animals as replicates makes it difficult to compare across studies. Here we have profiled secondary intention healing of incisional and excisional wounds within the same animal, assessing multiple parameters to determine the optimal methodology for future studies. We report that histology provides the least variable assessment of healing. Furthermore, histology alone (not planimetry) is able to detect accelerated healing in a castrated mouse model. Perhaps most importantly, we find virtually no correlation between wounds within the same animal, suggesting that use of wound (not animal) biological replicates is perfectly acceptable. Overall, these findings should guide and refine future studies, increasing the likelihood of detecting novel phenotypes while reducing the numbers of animals required for experimentation.

SUBMITTER: Ansell DM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4309476 | biostudies-other | 2014 Mar-Apr

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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A statistical analysis of murine incisional and excisional acute wound models.

Ansell David M DM   Campbell Laura L   Thomason Helen A HA   Brass Andrew A   Hardman Matthew J MJ  

Wound repair and regeneration : official publication of the Wound Healing Society [and] the European Tissue Repair Society 20140301 2


Mice represent the most commonly used species for preclinical in vivo research. While incisional and excisional acute murine wound models are both frequently employed, there is little agreement on which model is optimum. Moreover, current lack of standardization of wounding procedure, analysis time point(s), method of assessment, and the use of individual wounds vs. individual animals as replicates makes it difficult to compare across studies. Here we have profiled secondary intention healing of  ...[more]

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