Pellets containing an analgesic uniformly dispersed in a lipid carrier
such as cholesterol mixed with fatty acid esters, can be used to provide
long term pain relief. 5 mg cholesterol-tryglyceride-buprenorphine
pellets released the majority of drug in 24-48 hours after implant and
provide clinically significant plasma levels of analgesia in mice for 3-9
days. Blood levels of analgesia peak at day-1 and are substantially
complete by day-5 depending on the level of buprenorphine. These results
demonstrate that post surgical implants provide clinically significant
levels of analgesia in the 24-48 hour period following surgery and thus
obviate the time consuming, expensive, and high-risk need to inject mice
post surgery. The pellets are safe and easy to use. Placed in the
surgical wound at the end of surgery, they provide 2-3 days of analgesia
and obviate the need for subsequent handling of the animal for pain
therapy. The implants have no detectable effect on mouse behavior,
hematology, or liver chemistry. The unexpected release kinetics of the 5
mg pellet provides an ideal implant for post surgical analgesia. These
implants solve a significant problem facing scientists who use rodents in
research and abide by international of animal welfare.