The ferret for non-rodent toxicity studies. A pathologist's view

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Abstract

Ferrets have been used in our laboratories over the past 4 years in 12 small drug toxicity studies (14-28 days, 6-8 ferrets, usually male) and recently for a larger study (90 days, 54 ferrets). This has provided a basis for assessing the suitability of the ferret as an alternative species for non-rodent drug toxicity studies. It is amenable to daily dosing by gavage, and it shows gastric damage of a similar type and degree to the dog in response to oral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Certain minor peculiarities of its background pathology are worth noting, but no major problems were seen in this area which would limit its usefulness for routine toxicity testing.

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Beach, J. E. (1982). The ferret for non-rodent toxicity studies. A pathologist’s view. Archives of Toxicology, 49(Suppl. 5), 279–282. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-68511-8_48

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