SASA10150U Experimental Animal Nutrition and Physiology, part 1 (EANP1)
The contents of the course covers:
1) Presentation of experimental techniques for assessment of whole
animal function and metabolism of nutrients at the whole animal and
organ level (in vivo/in vitro). This covers both a theoretical
introduction as well as practical demonstrations of key techniques.
2) A 30 h block which fulfills the educational requirements by
Council of Europe (category b) and Denmark for persons working with
experimental animals or assisting in animal experiments (a diploma
will be issued upon completion of the course).
3) Principles necessary for planning and implementing in vivo or in
vitro scientific investigations as well as for critically
evaluating results obtained from such investigations. This includes
such aspects as protocol planning, experimental design and data
evaluation.
Knowledge
- describe the basic principles behind experimental methods for
measuring nutritional characteristics of feedstuffs, feed intake,
chewing activity, in vivo and in vitro digestibility,
- describe the methods for measuring digestibility in different
segments of the digestive tract in monogastic and ruminant animals
by use of cannulation and marker techniques, passage rate and
digestion kinetics
- describe the theoretical background of energy transfer from
cellular to the whole body level, techniques and methods for
measuring nitrogen, energy balances, heat production and substrate
oxidation
- describe the use of molecular biological techniques in analysis
of cell and tissue function
- describe catheter techniques used to study tissue and organ
nutrient fluxes, practical guidelines for sampling of blood, rumen
fluid etc,
- describe appropriate experimental designs and basic statistical
approaches for use with these methodologies
- describe the legislation, handling and management of laboratory
animals
- integrate the outcomes from the methodologies, experimental
design work and legislative aspects to obtain an understanding of
the ethical use of animals in research
Skills
- be able to describe principles and methods used in selected in
vivo demonstrations
- be able to evaluate experimental results/data from different in
vivo measurements.
- be able to discus limitations, advantages and their potential
applications of the different experimental methods
- be able to interpret experimental results based on theoretical
knowledge
- be able to design experimental animal protocols and use relevant
legislation for conducting animal experiments in an ethical way
Competences
- ability to cooperate with other researches, both inter and intra
disciplinary at different levels and with different degree of
responsibility
- ability to adopt above described knowledge and skills
- ability to disseminate methodology and obtained results to
professionals, lay persons and general public
- ability to perform animal experiments legally according to
Council of Europe 1993 resolution category B
The written examination is obligatory in order to obtain EU
approved diploma to be allowed working with experimental
animals.
Selected reviews/research papers and a list of the literature to
be used can be obtained from the course coordinators.
Thomas Krohn: Forsøgsdyrhåndbogen, KU-IVP
Annelise Hem, Dag Marcus Eide, Espen Engh & Adrian Smith:
Laboratory Animal Science, Norwegian Veterinary School, 2001,
http://oslovet.veths.no/dokument.aspx?dokument=203, chapter
9-14,16-17, 19-26, 28
- Category
- Hours
- Colloquia
- 10
- Exam
- 2
- Lectures
- 25
- Practical exercises
- 70
- Preparation
- 69
- Theory exercises
- 30
- Total
- 206
Note that it is not allowed to enroll to both courses. You need to choose either EANP1 or EANP2.
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Type of assessment
- Written examination, 20 minutes under invigilationOral examinationThe written exam consists of 16 questions of which up to 5 questions can be multiple choice. Every question gives 0, 1, 2 or 3 points, except multiple choice questions, which give either 0 or 3 points. To achieve the level 2, a total of at least 24 points must be awarded.
The written examination is obligatory in order to obtain EU approved diploma to be allowed working with experimental animals.
The oral examination (time for preparation) regarding other topics covered in the course, where the student will draw a question based on demonstrations covered in the course. - Exam registration requirements
- Participation in 75 % of practical demonstrations
- Aid
- Only certain aids allowed
Written examination (to obtain EU approved diploma): no aids allowed.
Oral examination: all books, reports etc. allowed - Marking scale
- passed/not passed
- Censorship form
- No external censorship
More than one internal examiner
Criteria for exam assesment
To pass both oral examination and written examination the
student shall:
- be able to describe principles and methods used in selected in
vivo demonstrations
- be able to evaluate experimental results/data from different in
vivo measurements.
- be able to discus limitations, advantages and their potential
applications of the different experimental methods
- be able to interpret experimental results based on theoretical
knowledge
- be able to design experimental animal protocols and use relevant
legislation for conducting animal experiments in an ethical way
Course information
- Language
- English
- Course code
- SASA10150U
- Credit
- 7,5 ECTS
- Level
- Full Degree MasterPart Time Master,Ph.D.
- Duration
- 1 block
- Placement
- Block 2
- Schedule
- A (Tues 8-12 + Thurs 8-17)
- Course capacity
- No limit
- Study board
- Study Board of Veterinary Sciences
Contracting departments
- Department of Veterinary Clinical and Animal Sciences
- Department of Veterinary Disease Biology
Course responsibles
- Peder Nørgaard (3-80757e5083857e743e7b853e747b)