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Britches

britches1985

About Me


Britches was the name given by researchers to a Stump-tailed Macaque monkey who was born into a breeding colony at the University of California, Riverside in March 1985. He was removed from his mother at birth and had his eyelids sewn shut as part of a three-year maternal and sensory-deprivation study involving 24 infant monkeys. The study was conducted by David H. Warren.
Britches was removed from the laboratory, along with 700 other animals, when he was five weeks old during a raid on April 20, 1985 by the Animal Liberation Front (ALF). The ALF made a videotape of their raid and of Britches' condition when they found him. As a result of the publicity when the video was released by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, and after condemnation of the experiments by scientists and the American Council of the Blind, eight of the 17 studies interrupted by the raid were not restarted, and the university stopped allowing baby monkeys' eyes to be sewn shut, according to reports filed by the university with the government. Dr. Grant Mack, president of the American Council of the Blind, called the experiment "one of the most repugnant and ill-conceived boondoggles that I've heard about for a long time."
The experiments were designed to study the behavioral and neural development of monkeys reared with a sensory substitution device. Five groups of four macaques were to be raised from birth to three months, and one group to six months, blinded while wearing a Trisensor Aid (TSA), an experimental version of a blind travel aid, the Sonicguide. Other control groups were to wear the device with normal vision, or wear a dummy device with no vision. At the end of the experiment, the monkeys were to be killed, and the visual, auditory and motor areas in their brains would be studied.
Activists found Britches alone in a cage with bandages around his eyes and a sonar device attached to his head that emitted a high-pitched screech every few minutes. He was clinging to a device, covered in towelling, that had two fake nipples attached, apparently intended to serve as a surrogate mother.
Veterinarian ophthalmologist Dr. Ned Buyukmihci of the University of California, Davis, and founder of Veterinarians for Animal Rights, examined Britches after he was removed from the lab. He stated that the sutures used were too large and that the monkey's eye pads were filthy. He said: "There is no possible justification for this sloppy, painful experiment."
Bettina Flavioli, a veterinarian hired by the ALF, examined Britches and wrote a report on the day of his removal from the lab. According to Ingrid Newkirk, president of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, the report read:
"On this day, April 20, 1985, I have been called to administer an examination and follow-up care to an infant stumptail macaque, male, my guess approximately five weeks of age. Said infant allegedly liberated by the Animal Liberation Front from the UC-Riverside laboratory.
"Attached to infant's head by means of bandage and tape is an apparatus of some sort with what appears to be some sort of electrical cord extending from it. It has been cut. Bilaterally are short lengths of tubing emerging from the bandage. Tape is in direct contact with the face and neck. Bandage lifted rostrally from right eye due to excessive moisture and right eye partially visible.
"Beneath the bandages are two cotton pads, one for each eye ... Both pads are filthy and soaked with moisture. Bilaterally upper eyelids are sutured to lower eyelids. The sutures are grossly oversized for the purpose intended. Many of these sutures have torn through lid tissue resulting in multiple lacerations of the lids. There is an open space between upper and lower lids of both eyes of about one quarter inch, and sutures are contacting corneal tissue resulting in excessive tearing ...
"Infant demonstrates photophobia. Penis of infant is edematous and inflamed. There are smegma accumulations. Generalized muscle development poor. Skin dry. Body odor foul."
When he was five months old, Britches was flown to a sanctuary in Mexico and given to an elderly female macaque who had already raised several orphans.
PLEASE CONSIDER MAKING BRITCHES ONE OF YOUR TOP FRIENDS TO HELP RAISE AWARENESS ABOUT THE HORRORS OF VIVISECTION, THANK YOU.
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ABOUT MACAQUE MONKEYS:
The macaques constitute a genus of Old World monkeys of the subfamily Cercopithecinae.
Macaques are the most widespread primate genus, ranging from northern Africa to Japan. Twenty-two macaque species are currently recognised, and they include some of the monkeys best known to non-zoologists, such as the Rhesus Macaque (as the Rhesus Monkey), Macaca mulatta, and the Barbary Macaque (as the Barbary Ape), M. sylvanus, a colony of which lives on the Rock of Gibraltar. Although several species lack tails, and their common names therefore refer to them as apes, these are true monkeys, with no greater relationship to the true apes than any other Old World monkeys.
Several species of macaque are used extensively in animal testing.
BRITCHES
The story of Britches has a happier ending than most vivisection victims. He was released from his misery when still a young baby, the stitches removed from his eyes and the long and painful process of trying to repair the acute psychological damage undertaken. It would be nice to think that this compassionate response was initiated by the vivisectors responsible for his pain - but it wasn’t. It was made possible only because the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) broke into the laboratories and released him, finding a loving and caring refuge where he would be safe.
READ THE STORY OF BRITCHES AS TOLD BY A BRITISH SCIENTIST WHO WAS ONCE A WITNESS TO ANIMAL EXPERIMENTATION HERE!

My Interests



Macaque monkeys in the wild :)

PAINFUL AND POINTLESS
Animal Aid's Mad Science Awards - handed out each August for pointless and grotesque scientific research - are this year presented to 10 research teams conducting lethal experiments on primates.
Introduction
In projects lasting months and even years, groups of monkeys were deliberately brain-damaged with chemicals and then set a battery of tests. Most of the experiments ended with the monkeys being killed and various body parts analysed. But prior to death, the animals in our highlighted experiments suffered symptoms which included seizures, vomiting, diarrhoea, tremors and uncontrollable body movements.
Human behaviour is full of contradictions and double standards, with convoluted arguments employed to justify our inconsistent beliefs and actions. Rarely is this more evident than in our attitudes towards non-human primates; our undisputed evolutionary cousins. We marvel at our shared intelligence and social interactions, yet deny this kinship when it suits us in order to justify our exploitation and abuse.
Thankfully, there are some limits to the abuse. In Britain, the government is not prepared to sanction experiments on great apes - our closest cousins - and so the laboratory use of chimpanzees, orang-utans and gorillas is banned.
UK labs do, however, still use large numbers of macaques, marmosets and other monkeys: in 1993, the UK was the largest importer of such animals in Europe and until 1989 the majority were taken from the wild. Opinion polls repeatedly show that the vast majority of the public finds the use of primates as laboratory tools abhorrent and would like to see such activities banned as an urgent priority. Depressingly, there has been scant progress in even reducing the number of primates used during the past 20 years. The total consumed in 2000 was 2,951, while the total number of actual monkey experiments was 3,690. Most were toxicity (poisoning) tests for the pharmaceutical industry. Equally shocking is the large number of these tests that used monkeys from 'non-designated' suppliers operating outside Europe. The figure for 2000 was 1332 - a more than three-fold increase on the previous year. How many of the monkeys were trapped in the wild - as opposed to captive-bred - is unclear.
Marmosets are a popular choice - in the words of the Cambridge researchers in Experiment 3 - because of their low cost, ease of handling and prolific breeding. In the wild, marmosets ('new world' monkeys) live in sociable family groups in the Brazilian rainforest, where they eat fruit and the sap of the trees in whose high branches they live. The males uniquely assist in the birth of their babies and help to tend them in their first few months. Close relationships are maintained by mutual grooming. Macaques are 'old world' monkeys, native to Asia, and there are several species, including rhesus and cynomolgus - the two species most commonly used by vivisectors. Macaques are highly gregarious and live in large social troops, sometimes numbering up to a hundred individuals. They communicate using a wide variety of sounds and postures.
This year's Mad Science Awards, as indicated, feature a variety of experiments in which marmosets or macaque monkeys were deliberately brain-damaged in order to assess the effects on either their vision, their memory and learning ability, or their control of movement. Some of these experiments were merely 'fundamental research', notably Experiment 6, in which Oxford University researcher R.E. Passingham earns the dubious honour of becoming our first Mad Science double award winner, having been involved in earlier psychological and food deprivation tests on brain-damaged monkeys featured in our 1997 awards.
Several of this year's experiments purport to be aimed at researching strokes, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, or Huntington's Disease. The truth is that such crude and artificial replication of complex and multifactorial conditions means the 'models' bear little relation to the real disease in humans - both in terms of the pathological signs and the progression of the symptoms as they evolve over several years in patients.
In addition, we spotlight some horrifying xenotransplantation experiments conducted by the controversial commercial testing lab, Huntingdon Life Sciences. These involve the switching of vital organs from one species to another.
Ten years ago, national campaign group Advocates for Animals analysed 60 experiments on primates and concluded that 13 of them should not have been authorised under the 1986 Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act, the law governing vivisection. In 1995, the Home Office agreed to adopt recommendations made by the RSPCA and the Animal Procedures Committee (its own advisory body) requiring stricter controls and improved standards of housing and husbandry for primates. This included a ban on the use of wild-caught primates unless 'exceptional and specific' justification can be made. We contend that these recommendations are being flouted and that NONE of the experiments featured in this year's Mad Science Awards should have been authorised under the 1986 Act.
This is because an integral part of the Act is a cost-benefit assessment, which requires that the likely adverse effects on the animals be weighed against the benefits likely to accrue to humanity. In none of the featured experiments can the very real suffering of the monkeys possibly be justified by the often vaguely defined hypothetical future benefits to our own species. Experiments 1, 2, 5 and 6, in particular, could be described as 'fundamental', with no obvious or immediate application to human medicine.
All of the experiments involved severe torment for the monkeys, but the level of suffering in example 10 was particularly extreme, and therefore required an exceptionally strong justification.
The researchers responsible for Experiment 10 argue that hundreds of thousands of lives could be saved by using organs from pigs. But they neglect to mention that fundamental technical hurdles remain as intractable as ever, despite years of xenotransplantation research and the use of thousands of experimental animals. It is also the case that organ failure could be dramatically reduced by improvements in diet and lifestyle brought about through better health education. Equally, artificial devices such as the Jarvik 2000 heart could be developed clinically and used more safely. Also omitted from the authors' report is a proper assessment of the potentially devastating health risk that would be imposed upon the general human population were organs from other species to be transplanted into our own. This risk relates to the danger of a new disease pandemic, quite possibly worse than AIDS, being unleashed by the activation of latent pig viruses following their introduction - along with the transplanted organ - into a new, heavily immunosuppressed, human host. The danger was emphasised by the UK Xenotransplantation Interim Regulatory Authority in February of this year.
A second reason why our featured experiments should not have been authorised is because there are rational and humane routes to the same goal - i.e. to the generation of research data that is relevant to people, and the delivery of better health care. The road to these goals demands the introduction of a policy of genuine health promotion, of less reliance on drug-orientated approaches and - not least - proper funding and support for non-animal research methods.
According to both UK and EU law, the existence of alternative methods precludes the use of animals. As far as research into brain disorders is concerned, the appropriate methods to use are the many state-of-the-art imaging techniques now available. These allow the functioning brain (or other organs) to be monitored in conscious human patients and in healthy volunteers. These systems include MRI (magnetic resonance imaging), PET (positron emission topography), CAT (computer-aided tomography), TMS (transcranial magnetic stimulation), MEG (magnetoencephalography), EROS (event-related optical signals) and other sophisticated scanning methods.
A third reason for barring our 10 experiments is that primates are - quite simply - not a valid model for human beings. Therefore, the study of them detracts from human-based medical research. Primates are reported to be 99% similar to humans in terms of their DNA make-up, but that 1% difference is vital to the way we function and experience disease. There are huge differences between our immune systems and our metabolism - in fact, our whole biochemistry. The inventor of the polio vaccine that bears his name, Dr Albert Sabin, stated that the vaccine was 'long delayed by the erroneous conception of the nature of the human disease, based on misleading experimental models in monkeys.' Dr. Mark Feinberg, a leading AIDS researcher, said in 1997: 'What good does it do you to test something in a monkey? You find five or six years from now that it works in the monkey, and then you test it in humans and you realise that humans behave totally differently from monkeys, so you've wasted five years.' It was because of this enormous squandering of resources that leading AIDS group, ACT UP San Francisco, voted in 1995 to ban animal experimentation.
As to the source of the monkeys used in the experiments, most of the research teams declare that their animals were captive bred, as opposed to having been trapped and taken from the wild. However, for their long-term organ swap experimental programme, the biotech company Imutran (who feature in Experiment 10) did obtain wild-caught baboons - from non-designated dealers in non-EU countries, with full Home Office permission. Permission was granted because of the 'exceptional justification' that the company needed larger animals for ease of surgery than those available legitimately. All of which goes to show just how poorly, in reality, the most highly protected animals we use today in British laboratories are served by 'the finest legislation of its type in the world'.
Well-known primate behaviourist Dr. Jane Goodall urged science 'to direct its collectively awesome intellect into different pathways in its search to alleviate human suffering'. This year's Mad Science Awards are particularly sad because they demonstrate the failure of that intellect to recognise the simple and fundamental truth that no animals, not even monkeys, are miniature humans in a furry disguise.
Experiment 1: Brain damaged monkeys set thousands of tests
Six macaque monkeys at Oxford University were placed in small, individual cages in front of a computer screen, where they had to identify blue squares among green ones (or vice versa) several thousand times. In return, they received small food rewards. Then four of the six had different parts of the visual cortex of their brains removed and were subsequently re-tested several thousand more times. A key purpose of this experiment was to confirm the role played by particular parts of the brain in a phenomenon known as 'priming'. This is where an advantage is conferred on a subject when undertaking subsequent repetitions of a previously learned response. This information was already known from studies in humans. The researchers here could clearly have obtained these results from scanning human brains engaged in visual tasks. It is difficult to imagine benefits from this experiment significant enough to justify the enormous suffering of the animals involved.
Funded by the Medical Research Council
Experiment 2: Brain damage tests last nine years
As part of a long-term study at Oxford University involving at least 20 monkeys, three macaques had part of their brains' visual cortex removed and were then tested at various times on a variety of visual tasks. The tests lasted for as long as nine years, by which time the three monkeys had died. As recognised from previous such research, the Oxford team found that the extent of visual damage varies even amongst monkeys with a similar level of deliberately inflicted brain damage. This is because the size of key parts of the brain are different in individual monkeys and different again in humans. Age when the surgical damage is inflicted and length of post-operative survival time also have an impact on the extent of the visual damage found. The results posed many more questions than answers but the researchers believed their experiments confirmed what had been already concluded from experiments by other research teams: namely, that the visual damage being studied in these surgically mutilated monkeys probably arose from differences in the number of cells in the different regions of the brain.
Human head injury victims are, sadly, all too numerous, and would clearly be the ideal research subjects to speed progress into possible treatments for their own condition. Not only may non-invasive investigation of such patients yield vital clues and enable them to help themselves and others in their condition, but countless primates could be spared years of suffering and misery.
Funded by the Medical Research Council.
Experiment 3: Brain-damaged monkeys' hands immobilised with sticky tape
At Cambridge University, 12 marmosets each received ten or more separate injections of a seizure-causing chemical directly into two regions of their brains. After recovery from their post-operative seizures, they were assessed for dexterity on a battery of tasks over the course of the following nine months, before they were killed and their brains removed for analysis. Some of the tasks called for them to reach for and retrieve food 'rewards' - sometimes with one hand covered in gauze and immobilised by sticking plaster. The researchers noted that the brain damage caused 'clumsiness' and dropping of food. In other tests, the monkeys feet were bound in sticky postal labels. The researchers checked how long it took to bite and tear their way free.
The most oppressive test involved injecting the marmosets with amphetamine or apomorphine. The second drug caused the brain-damaged animals to spin uncontrollably in their cages - as many as 300 times in a 60 minute session. The drug is also believed to have provoked some of them into repeatedly licking the front panel of their cages. The researchers acknowledged that they don't know why the spinning happens but regard it as a useful measurement of brain damage.
The team says their experiments were aimed at advancing treatment of Huntington's Disease. Although they admitted that the brain damage they inflicted 'did not... replicate the pathology or the symptoms of Huntington's Disease' they have now learned how to inflict two particular types of brain damage in marmosets - one of which, they claimed, resulted in a predictable kind of impairment of movement and co-ordination. This brain-damage 'model', along with the research team's battery of tests, would be useful for future studies of potential treatments for Huntington's. These experimental treatments would include the transplantation of foetal brain cells 'harvested' from pregnant marmosets and injected into more deliberatedly brain-damaged adults.
Moral questions aside, the study is scientifically flawed since it is looking at a totally false simulation of a human condition. The same is true for similar research into Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases, as in the experiment described below (Number 4). It is human-based observations that have established the biochemical basis of these neurological illnesses and which will provide targets for possible therapies in the future.
Funded by the Medical Research Council.
Experiment 4: Daily injections cause nerve damage
The stated aim of this experiment - conducted at Guy's, King's and St.Thomas' School of Biomedical Sciences in London - was to investigate how chemicals in the human brain act to enhance the effects of drugs given to sufferers of Parkinson's Disease. In an attempt to mimic certain Parkinson's symptoms, 18 marmoset monkeys were nerve and brain-damaged through daily injections - over five days - of a toxic chemical. The animals suffered a range of motor dysfunctions, including freezing of movements, tremor, loss of control and unstable posture. They were also unable to vocalise.
The marmosets were then subjected to further nerve and brain damage through injections of another toxic chemical that is assumed to disrupt production of a hormone believed to work beneficially with Parkinson's drugs.
The injection of this second toxic chemical - known as NSD-1015 - caused several hours of vomiting in all the animals. Various drug treatments were then tried on the doubly-damaged monkeys to see which ones improved motor function.
The two categories of drugs being tried were L-DOPA and what are known as dopamine agonists. The monkeys' movements were monitored for up to 12 hours in tiny observation cages, to see which drugs were best at restoring some of the impaired movement. At least one of the drugs elicited reactions opposite to those produced in rats. 'The reason for this conflicting result is unclear', the authors admitted.
Given that the experiment was about complex questions as to precisely how and why certain drugs work on human beings with Parkinson's Disease, it makes no sense to be testing the drugs on another species whose chemically-induced nerve and brain damage resembles the disease in humans in only the most superficial manner.
In order to avoid such conflicting results between different species, the information being sought here could be investigated in donated human brain tissue. The Humane Research Trust funds such studies at the Cambridge Brain Bank at Addenbrooke's Hospital, using tissue from the brains of patients who - for the sake of others - wanted to help research into the condition from which they suffered.
Funded by the Parkinson's Disease Society.
Experiment 5: Food tests for brain-damaged marmosets
The Wellcome Trust and the Royal Society funded experiments at Cambridge University that involved damaging the brains of at least 15 marmoset monkeys (the total used isn't made absolutely clear) and then putting them through a series of meticulously devised and executed torments. The stated purpose was to establish which parts of the brain control functions such as choice, emotion and behaviour. Four of the monkeys were 'sham-operated controls' - meaning that they were injected in their skulls with an inert chemical. This is despite the fact that the Home Office discourages unnecessary surgical 'control' procedures.
Having inflicted 'selective lesions' to various parts of the brain, the monkeys were set three kinds of tests. In one, they were trained to reach into a transparent box and retrieve a food reward. Another called for them to make food choices. The third test involved them being trained to press a computer screen to get a food reward. But having been conditioned to expect a reward for each screen touch, the researchers, without warning, withheld the rewards and counted how many times the brain-damaged monkeys would carry on vainly pressing the screen - some of them pushed more than 50 times, it seems. In relation to all these perform-and-reward experiments, the question begs itself: How hungry were the monkeys made prior to the testing so that they would perform for their 'rewards'?
There is simply no reason to suppose that complex human emotion and behaviour can be ascribed to the same structures as those in marmosets' brains. In fact, this study was prompted by the conflicting behavioural responses between brain-damaged macaques and humans. The only way to ascertain which brain regions are involved in specific human thought processes and abilities is to study the human brain. Functional MRI scanners can monitor the brain activity of volunteers as they undertake tests of memory and other skills, to reveal brain areas that are active during particular activities. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) is a new technique which temporarily disrupts the functioning of the brain, allowing scientists to assess the impact of 'switching off' specific regions without permanently removing them. The Dr Hadwen Trust for Humane Research is funding such studies at Oxford University.
Experiment 6: 32 brain injections with destructive chemical
At Oxford University, six cynomolgus monkeys twice underwent major brain surgery, five days or more apart. This was to inflict 16 lesions on one side of the brain, followed by 16 more to the other hemisphere. The damage was done by injecting a destructive chemical - one injection for each of the 32 lesions. The effects were assessed through literally thousands of cognitive tests that called for the animals to move a joystick or touch a screen in response to a given image. The 'reward' for a correct response was pelleted feed. One of the authors - R.E. Passingham - was a Mad Science Award winner in 1997 for another series of experiments on monkeys. This again involved the animals being seriously brain-damaged, after which they were deprived of food and set a 'frustration task', whereby food was visible to them but could not be reached. The animals resorted to biting their own limbs and licking the bar gates.
This latest experiment, first highlighted by the National Anti Vivisection Society, ended with all the animals being killed and their brains extracted for analysis. It was said to be aimed at establishing whether a part of the brain called the cerebellum plays a direct role in cognition -i.e. in the thinking, conceiving and perceiving actions of the mind. By the end of their experiment, the authors decided against the idea of the cerebellum having a cognitive role. However, the data yielded by these monkey experiments flatly contradicted results obtained in tests on brain-damaged human patients, and the authors' attempts to explain the anomalies merely strengthened the argument against using animals for such tests. One 'explanation' was that human patients might have additional difficult-to-discover brain damage, which would upset the results. But long-term studies on humans, that also included autopsies, would resolve this question. Another excuse was that people have variable IQs which affect their performance of the tests - but so do monkeys, as illustrated by the variable performance of the monkeys in the authors' own experiments. And there was the further confounding factor in these current tests - namely, the impossibility of inflicting uniform brain damage, in order to extract uniform data. The only way to investigate human brain functions is to study the human brain.
Experiment 7: Monkeys and cats in open-skull 'stroke' research
At Guy's, King's College and St. Thomas' Hospitals School of Medicine, London, SmithKline Beecham, HeadFirst and the Golden Charitable Trust sponsored 'stroke research' using five squirrel monkeys and eight cats. The animals were subjected to open-skull experiments, during which they were artificially ventilated via tracheostomy (a tube into the windpipe), while their cerebral arteries were exposed, cauterized (to simulate a stroke) and monitored for five hours. Anaesthesia throughout the experiment was maintained at a very low level. The animals were then killed with an overdose of anaesthetic.
The aim of the experiments was to investigate specific tissue changes (known as PIDs) that occur in animals in whom 'stroke' has been artificially induced, despite the fact that these particular changes might not even occur in human stroke victims.
The researchers also acknowledged that previous research showed that PID frequency varied from animal to animal and from species to species. While their own brain-damaged cats and monkeys did show individual variations, the authors had expected to find fewer PIDs in the monkey group as a whole compared with the cat group. This was because, the logic went, monkeys are more like humans, in whom PIDs don't seem to occur - or at least, can't easily be detected. In fact, the PID frequency was similar in the cat and monkey groups - an outcome the researchers struggled to explain. Their best effort was along the lines: although monkeys are like people (which is why we used them for this experiment) the particular primate species we used - squirrel monkeys - have very small brains compared with humans. In fact, their brains are about the same size as cats'. This explains why the PID frequency was similar for the cats and the squirrel monkeys. But their answer doesn't explain why they are being paid to brain-damage monkeys instead of the resources going into studying consenting human patients, before and after their deaths.
Based on the confusion thrown up by such inter-species experimentation, the authors themselves admitted that it is unsurprising that clinical trials of stroke medications based on animal models 'should have proved unsuccessful to date'.
Experiment 8: Brain-damaged marmosets tested in plexiglass enclosures
Nine marmosets at Cambridge University were subjected to open-skull surgery to induce artificial 'strokes'. This was achieved by blocking and cutting the middle cerebral artery; hardly an accurate replication of the disease process in stroke patients, which takes many years to develop. Twenty-four hours later, four of them were operated on again to insert a mini-pump between their shoulder-blades for the delivery of an anti-stroke drug. This mini-pump device soon needed replacing, which meant a repeat operation for the animals and the introduction of another pump. In the first weeks after surgery, the monkeys often held the arm affected by the brain-damage close to their chest or left it to dangle.
Three weeks and ten weeks post-surgery the monkeys were put into small plexiglass enclosures and set various behavioural tasks, which included searching and reaching for marshmallow pieces hidden in plastic tubes. Twenty weeks after surgery all animals were killed and their brains extracted for analysis.
The stated purpose of the experiment was to test the effectiveness of a drug, chlomethiazole, on the debilitating after-affects of stroke. The authors commented that clinical trials of drugs developed through studies on rats had been hampered because 'it is inherently difficult to extrapolate the findings from rodent studies'. But there emerged obvious problems too with their primate 'model'. When the monkeys were put through their first tests three weeks after surgery, although they had problems with the thoroughly unnatural tests set them by the vivisectors, they were able to do - almost as normal - things that come naturally to a monkey: i.e. run, climb, swing and jump. This outcome makes comparisons with human stroke patients impossible, given that it is precisely their normal everyday movements with which the stroke patients have problems.
Perversely, the 'anti-stroke' medication used in the experiments had already been tested, with a positive outcome, in stroke patients in a large (1360 patients) controlled trial, whose results were published the previous year. The purpose of this study, then, was to try to reproduce in another species the protective effects of a drug which had already been reported to work beneficially in humans.
The research team combined personnel from the government's Medical Research Council and the commercial drug giant Astra Zeneca.
Experiment 9: Marmosets as models of human fertility and reproduction
At the MRC reproductive biology unit in Edinburgh, 20 female marmosets were injected three or more times a week with antibodies or a 'control' chemical. They also had blood samples taken from their thighs three times a week - a procedure which can be very stressful for marmosets. The animals were then killed for examination of their ovaries.
The researchers say that the main purpose of the experiment was to explore the impact on the reproductive tissue of an antibody designed to suppress the production of blood vessels. The use of such antibodies and other chemicals that block blood vessel growth (known as angiogenesis inhibitors), are increasingly being investigated as a treatment for conditions as varied as cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis and proliferation of blood vessels in the eye.
In fact, angiogenesis can be studied in human tumours in vitro; indeed, the phenomenon is currently the subject of much research supported by the Lord Dowding Fund for Humane Research and many others.
The problem with this featured experiment, as always, is applying results from one species to another. As the authors acknowledge, an angiogenesis inhibitor that, in earlier experiments, prevented pregnancy in rodents had no effect on monkeys, in whom the mechanisms regulating oestrus are 'markedly different'. Yet the basic premise of this experiment is that results from marmosets can be directly extrapolated to women.
Experiment 10: Xenotransplantation of pig organs into primates
At Huntingdon Life Sciences, 14 cynomolgus macaques underwent major surgery to remove their spleens and one of two kidneys, and have them replaced with a kidney taken from young (3-4 week-old) piglets. Nine of the piglets had been been genetically altered so that their organs were less likely to be immediately rejected when transplanted into the monkeys. After the transplants, the monkeys were injected or force-fed by tube every day with a powerful cocktail of drugs designed to suppress their bodies' natural tendency to reject the foreign kidneys. The researchers monitored their symptoms until they died - and claimed the experiment was a success because not all the monkeys perished within the first few days. Maximum survival was one monkey for 78 days.
The experiment was part of a long-running organ swap programme commissioned by biotech company Imutran and carried out at Huntingdon. Hundreds of monkeys - many of them wild-caught - and thousands of pigs have been involved. The animal suffering and scientific failings of the project were exposed in a September 2000 Daily Express series of articles, based on internal company documents. Imutran subsequently went to court to gag anti-vivisection group Uncaged Campaigns which had produced a major report on the leaked documents. That legal battle continues.
The experiment featured here - one of a small number to have been published - was also designed to see whether removing the monkeys' spleens would delay the time taken for the pig organ to be rejected. Average survival time for the monkeys with kidneys from genetically altered pigs was just 35 days. The average survival time for all 14 monkeys was 24 days. And this miserable 'success' was achieved only by giving the monkeys heavy doses of three toxic anti-rejection drugs. Among the 'adverse events' logged by the authors were vomiting, diarrhoea, a build up of fluid in the body tissues, pancreatitis, gastro intestinal haemorrage, anaemia and kidney failure.
The cache of leaked internal documents, acquired by Uncaged Campaigns and reported from September 21, 2000 in the Daily Express, revealed much more of the story behind the supposed 'success' of the researchers responsible for the xenotransplantation experiment above. Many of the monkeys, the Express reported, had been captured from the wild and imprisoned in tropical holding camps, where some of them died. They were then transported for 35 hours or more in tiny cages in which some of them suffocated en route. After quarantine, the experiments began. Various organs from genetically manipulated pigs were transplanted into different parts of the monkeys' bodies - including hearts being stitched into their necks so that the rejection process could be easily watched. A lucky 25% of monkeys died on the operating table or shortly afterwards. In one experiment, 33 out of 61 monkeys died within 24 hours of a transplant due to 'technical failures'.
The 'survivors' were subjected to quantities of immunosuppressive drugs, in an attempt to stave off the inevitable rejection process. The drug doses were so large as to be severely poisonous. The daily log recorded their condition over their last agonising weeks. A typical entry read: 'quiet... huddled... shivering... unsteady... in spasm... vomiting... diarrhoea.'
A typical casualty was a baboon with a pig heart stitched into his neck. He was observed, during his last days, holding the swollen surgical wound from which yellow fluid seeped.
The internal company papers also pointed to serious errors and bad practice. Said the Express report:
'The documents show animals have been wrongly re-used in experiments, medicines have been left unlabelled and uncapped, and on hundreds of occasions scientists have failed to take readings and measurements from animals following operations... A monkey perished because a swab had been left inside his wound during the operation, causing his spleen to go septic. Another had to be "sacrificed" when researchers discovered the pig kidney it was to be given had been frozen by mistake.'
And a female monkey, the paper reported, had to be euthanased the day after she was given a dose of a drug four times higher than recommended.

I'd like to meet:



Anyone touched by the story of the liberation of Britches.

WATCH THE VIDEO OF BRITCHES HERE!

BRITCHES WANTS TO HELP OTHER PRIMATES!

The Britches page is touched to learn about the work being carried out by Save the Chimps and wants to help provide a permanent sanctuary for the lifelong care of chimpanzees rescued from research laboratories, entertainment and the pet trade.

Save the Chimps - who are they?

Save the Chimps was established in 1997, under the leadership of Carole Noon, Ph.D., STC's Director, in response to the U.S. Air Force's announcement that it was getting out of the chimpanzee research business. At the end of the long giveaway process, most of the chimpanzees, described by the USAF in a Wall Street Journal article as "surplus equipment," were sent to the Coulston Foundation in Alamogordo, NM, a biomedical laboratory with the worst record of any lab in the history of the Animal Welfare Act. Save the Chimps sued the Air Force on behalf of the chimpanzees given to the Coulston Foundation. After a year-long struggle, Save the Chimps gained permanent custody of 21 chimps, survivors and descendants of those captured in Africa in the 1950's and used by the Air Force in the original NASA "chimpanaut" program.

The vision of Save the Chimps was -- and remains -- to create a Sanctuary where rescued chimpanzees can live out their lives without the threat of ever returning to a laboratory. A generous donation by the Arcus Foundation enabled Save the Chimps to purchase 200 acres for a permanent sanctuary in Ft. Pierce, Florida. The Sanctuary environment was carefully designed to nurture and stimulate these sensitive and complex primates by creating a secure and enriching environment, including the construction of a three-acre island on which to safely express natural behaviors. These former lab chimpanzees now live as a social group.

With the Florida Sanctuary a reality for the 21 Air Force chimps, an unexpected event rapidly expanded the scope of Save the Chimps.

Rescuing the Coulston Lab Chimps

In September 2002, the Coulston Foundation, with governmental funding withdrawn due to violations of the Animal Welfare Act, was on the verge of bankruptcy. Frederick Coulston contacted Dr. Noon and offered to sell the laboratory land and buildings to Save the Chimps, and "donate" all its 266 chimpanzees. With the future of the primates in jeopardy, Save the Chimps received an unprecedented grant of $3.7 million from the Arcus Foundation to purchase the New Mexico laboratory. Additional funding from the Animal Rights Foundation of Florida, Doris Day Animal League, Friends of Washoe, In Defense of Animals and New England Anti-Vivisection Society (and others) made this the largest ever single effort on behalf of captive chimpanzees.

Immediately after taking possession of the lab, Dr. Noon and her staff began to modify the stark Alamogordo facility into a healthier and happier environment for the chimpanzees now in their charge, including, for the first time in their lives, fresh food, enlarged cages, enrichment activities, compassionate caregivers and, most importantly, the establishment of social groups. By introducing the chimps to one another and allowing them to form family units, while still in New Mexico awaiting completion of the islands and facilities in Florida, their transition to the Islands in the Sun will be much faster and smoother.

Islands in the Sun: A Permanent Home in Florida

With the acquisition of the Coulston Lab, planning began for the expansion of the Florida facility to accommodate the New Mexico chimps. Construction is now complete on 11 additional three-acre islands, each linked to a housing and care center by a land bridge. The natural environment gives the chimpanzees a comfortable home in which to socialize and rebuild confidence shattered by years spent isolated in small cages.

135 chimpanzees have already moved from New Mexico to their new outdoor homes in Florida, and The Great Chimpanzee Migration continues...

Please donate here - no amount is too small!

BRITCHES T-SHIRTS!
We will soon be introducing all sorts of Britches merchandise but in the meantime we have T-shirts available. They feature a greyscale drawing of the now infamous Britches liberation picture with an Albert Schweitzer quote above reading "Think occasionally of the suffering of which you spare yourself the sight". They are in stock and ready for dispatch now so place your order to be one of the first to receive one of these unique shirts! They are priced at £16.99 (32.98 USD), including P&P and can be sent all over the world!
We are ethically sound too! All Britches t-shirts are printed on super-soft, high quality 100% certified pure organically grown cotton, using water based inks. Sample picture below shows a women's size medium in ercu.

MENS
Classic Style Organic T-shirt
WOMENS
Fitted Style Organic T-shirt

Medium - 41"
Large - 44"
X Large - 47" Small - 10 (32")
Medium - 12 (34")
Large - 14 (36")

ORDER HERE securely online using PayPal (a PayPal account is NOT required, just a valid debit or credit card)
* PLEASE NOTE WE ARE CURRENTLY OUT OF STOCK OF WOMENS LARGE ECRU *
MENS Classic Style Organic T-shirt

WOMENS Fitted Style Organic T-shirt

Please state size and colour on the payment page.
View a larger pic of the front here (opens in a new browser)
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My Blog

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