Reduction & Replacement Flashcards
1
Q
Two main types of tissue cultures
A
- organotypic cultures - parts of a tissue or organ placed in culture medium (3d structure limits access to nutrients and removal of waste, resulting in decreased durability)
- cell cultures ( typically results in loss of morphological and biochemical properties of cells and progressive divergence from the original cell type; commonly used for vaccine production, e.g. poliomyelitis vaccine produced form kidney cells
2
Q
Pros of in vitro studies
A
- generally more sensitive than in vivo studies since the isolated cells and organs receive no input form other body parts + models grown under well-controlled conditions
- no need for anesthesia (which might interfere)
- interpretation may be easier (although extrapolation is more problematic)
3
Q
Use of lower species
A
- bacteria, fungi, insects, mulluscs, plants…
- e.g. use of bacteria in Ames test to screen new compounds for mutagenic properties (carcinogenesis)
- yeast is used on a large scale as a vector for the expression of specific genes coding for antibody fragments or vaccine antigens
- by transgenesis, plants can also be made suitable for vaccine production
4
Q
Some examples of in vitro & other techniques for replacement
A
- HPLC (high pressure liquid chromatography) - most naturally derived hormones are now produced by rDNA techniques resulting in purer products. HPLC is being used for potency testing of these hormone preparations.
- physiologically based pharmacokinetic modelling can make predictions of the absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion of drugs
- human tissues, blood, etc.
- replacement of the rabbit eye irritation test by using bovine or chicken eyes from slaughterhouses
5
Q
Classical fallacies in (ethical) argumentation with respect to relevance
A
- appeal to the public
- argumentum ad hominem
- unwarranted appeal to compassion (sentimental)
- argument from authority
- appeal to involvement (someone suffering from heart disease in your family)
6
Q
Logical fallacies in (ethical) argumentation:
A
- argument from ignorance (no evidence of pain in cows, means no pain in cows)
- circular argument (begging the question)
- argument from correspondence (logically false analogies)
- unwarranted generalization (not all animal research yields useful results…therefore no point)
- a priori reasoning (accident; health is good, gene therapy improves health, ergo gene therapy is good)
- post hoc ergo propter hoc (sequence is confused with consequence)
- naturalistic fallacy (is/ought) (use of animals fits into the normal order of nature)
- on not being consequent (against animal experimentation and still accepting medicine for sick child
- equivocation (ambiguous terms and concepts