Two restraining devices in connection to surgical castration with or without local anesthesia: effects on piglet stress. Hokkanen, Ann-Helena (AH);Coutant, Mathilde (M);Heinonen, Mari (M);Norring, Marianna (M);Adam, Magdy (M);Oliviero, Claudio (C);Bergqvist, Tiina (T);Valros, Anna (A); |
Author information Porcine Health Manag.2025 Apr 15;11(1):21.doi:10.1186/s40813-025-00428-7 Abstract BACKGROUND: Surgical castration causes severe pain to young piglets. In addition, piglets experience intense stress from handling and restraining during the procedure. Furthermore, piglets must be restrained twice when receiving local anesthesia before castration, and the injections are painful. Unfortunately, strategies to reduce piglets' stress during handling, local anesthetic injections, and painful procedures are limited and poorly understood. Thus, we randomized 179 male piglets aged 3 to 4 days to be restrained with either a commonly used commercial tubular bench with a dorsal restraining posture or a custom-made castration rack with a vertical restraining posture. Piglets received local anesthetic or sham injections (mimicking local anesthesia but without skin penetration) 10 min before castration. We then compared the effect of these devices on the piglets' behavioral reactions, vocalizations, and body temperatures at the following four times: when restrained for the first time, when given local anesthetic injections or receiving sham injections, during the second time restrained, and during castration. |
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