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Validation studies on blood collection from the jugular vein of conscious mice.

J Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci · 2012

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study compared two methods of collecting blood from mice: drawing from the jugular vein without anesthesia and using a tail-incision technique. The jugular vein method allowed collecting nearly 15% of the mouse's blood in under a minute, with less damage to blood cells and lower signs of clotting or inflammation compared to the tail method. Mice showed similar stress hormone levels with both methods, but the tail method slightly increased inflammation markers. The jugular vein method was also used to measure drug levels and blood sugar responses, showing that exendin 4, a GLP-1 drug, significantly reduced blood sugar spikes after a glucose test.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJ Am Assoc Lab Anim Sci, 2012
Citations20
Relative citation ratio0.81
NIH percentile43
Molecules

Abstract

A method for blood collection from the jugular vein of mice without anesthesia was compared with a tail-incision technique. Jugular vein blood collection allowed withdrawal of almost 15% of the circulating blood volume at a time in less than 1 min. Hemolysis, hematocrit, and plasma thrombin-antithrombin complexes (a marker of blood coagulation) were higher in samples collected from the tail vein than the jugular vein. Mice produced similar plasma corticosterone levels after serial blood collection by either method. Tail incision led to a slight but significant increase in C-reactive protein levels. Using the jugular venipuncture technique, we then performed a pharmacokinetic study and an oral glucose tolerance test. Plasma concentrations of levofloxacin, an antimicrobial agent, were dose-dependently elevated after oral administration, and linear increases in C(max) and AUC were observed. We also confirmed that overall glucose excursion is significantly decreased in mice treated with exendin 4, a glucagon-like peptide 1 agonist. These results indicate that the jugular venipuncture is a useful technique from the point of view of no requirement for anesthetics, serial blood collection at short intervals, large volume of blood collection, quality of sample and animal welfare. This technique is of particular interest for studies that examine time-dependent changes in blood variables.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22776193 ↗