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  • Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    Plantar Test for Thermal Stimulation Hargreaves Apparatus frontal view

    In the late ‘80s Dr. Hargreaves invented a method to assess thermal pain sensation in unrestrained rodents by stimulating the single hind paw and thus allowing for unilateral/contralateral experiments. Ugo Basile made a science-grade instrument to perform this stimulation and automatically measure response, it became a gold-standard with more than 2,000 publications in 2022.

    A thermal...

    Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    Dynamic Plantar Aesthesiometer Full Front Upper View

    Touch sensitivity is traditionally tested with Von Frey filaments, which is a tedious and experimenter-dependent assay.

    The Dynamic Plantar Aesthesiometer is a unique system, which fully automates the amount of force applied by an electromagnetic, silent motor exerting from 0 to 100 grams at a rate adjustable from 0 to 50 seconds.

    When the animal responds, by withdrawing its...

    Animal
    Mouse, Rat

    Touch sensitivity in unrestrained animals is traditionally tested with Von Frey filaments, which is a tedious and experimenter-dependent assay.

    The Electronic Von Frey system solves the multiple measurement (i.e. multiple filaments) issue and the experimenter bias by using a hand-held force sensor with a rigid metal. The scientist gradually increases the force applied to the animal...

  • Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    Librae Incapacitance tester with Rat restrainer. Notice the foot pedal in case the experimenter wants to start/stop the test manually

    Measures the weight distribution difference between an injured and unaffected hind paw of a mouse or rat. For the assessment of spontaneous pain in osteoarthritis, bone cancer, nerve injury and post-operative pain studies. Automatic operation reduces operator bias, optimizes repeatability and saves time. Easy to set up. Data visualization to monitor trends. Fast and easy cleaning...

    Animal
    Rat

    Measures hypersensitivity to thermal (hot and cold) and/or mechanical stimulation of the orofacial area in rats (mouse adaptor available). For research into a wide range of pain conditions involving the trigeminal nerve.

    High throughput with data recorded from up to 16 cages with ORO-Software. Real time data display. Non-invasive, respectful test. Comprehensive metrics and easy data...

    Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    Thermal Place Preference - complete system

    The Thermal Place Preference test can be considered an evolution of the Hot/Cold plate test and it allows monitoring of temperature preferences by measuring the time spent in two compartments set at two different temperatures.

    This two temperature nociception test can be used in a mouse or rat and is composed of a standard hot/cold plate and of an hot plate, connected by a corridor. It...

  • Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    Tail Flick Unit - Thermal stimulation, D'Amour & Smith method

    Accurately measures the nociceptive threshold to infrared heat stimulus on the rat or mouse tail. Used for rapid screening of analgesic drugs by measuring reaction time to heat, even in anesthetized animals, crucial for repeated tests, thanks to the reflexive nature of the tail flick response.

    Adjustable I.R. intensity, bright touch-screen display with intuitive controls. Comfortable...

    Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    38500-001 PAM Electronic Unit, with sensor
    The P.A.M. (Pressure Application Measurement) device is an original tool designed for measuring mechanical pain threshold on joints. It was specifically designed and validated for Arthritis research and is therefore especially suited to assess joint hypersensitivity in rodent knees or ankles. Once saved, data can be browsed on the control unit and/or transferred to a PC in proprietary, Excel or...
    Animal
    Mouse, Rat

    Patented non-invasive vital signs monitor. Measures heart rate, arterial oxygen saturation (SpO2), breath rate, and temperature (optional) of anesthetized and conscious small laboratory animals of various sizes.

    Clinically validated and cited in a range of published studies including respiratory, neonatal, hypertension and brain injury.

  • Animal
    Mouse, Rat

    Invasive arterial or venous blood pressure measurement during animal surgery. For urodynamic, intrauterine and intracranial studies. Also suitable for intensive care.

    Connects to data acquisition systems such as our DataCapsule-Evo. High quality, robust, reusable and cost effective.

    Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    Blood Pressure Recorder-Non Invasive, shown with a mouse in its holder and the pressure generator (proximal) and the piezo sensor (distal)

    A multi-function, non-invasive blood pressure recorder for small to medium animals (mice to dogs) for use in a wide range of scientific studies, where systolic and diastolic pressure needs to be measured in a non-invasive way in anesthetized or awake animals.

    Combines functionality of multiple systems including pressure generation-pressure monitoring system, pulse amplifier,...

    Animal
    Mouse, Rat

    Measures the force on a rat or mouse paw according to the Randall-Selitto paw-pressure test, it enables rapid and precise screening of analgesic drugs for anti-nociceptive studies, in healthy or inflamed limbs. The device applies a steady increasing force, starting and stopping using the foot pedal. No calibration required. Digital model with force sensors and electronic unit is also...

  • Animal
    Mouse, Rat

    Provides simple, reliable and precise calibration for Ugo Basile Plantar Test & Tail Flick and other infrared (I.R.) analgesia meters.

    Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    20 filament kit with carrying case and force range from 0.008gr to 300gr

    Used to measure the paw withdrawal reflex when the mouse or rat paw is unexpectedly touched. For evaluating mechanical allodynia and cutaneous sensation levels. Popular non-invasive technique.

    Set of 20 monofilaments based on the Semmes Weinstein monofilament set. An ascending series of increasingly stiff filaments (from 0.008 to 300 grams). Features retractable head to protect the...

    Animal
    Rat
    The Durham Holders are new rat holders for trigeminal stimulation, the newest accessory for use with the Plantar Test and Dynamic Plantar Aesthesiometer, manufactured by Ugo Basile.
  • Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    Hot/Cold Plate - Screening of Thermal Hyperalgesia/Allodynia

    The hot cold plate test has been the gold standard test for thermal pain tests in rodents for decades. Through the years the devices have been improving and the techniques have become more sophisticated, adding to constant temperature methods also other ones.

    The Ugo Basile Hot/Cold plate test includes all the latest technologies necessary to run constant temperature, linear ramping...

    Animal
    Mouse
    TGR Thermal Gradient Ring 2.0

    The TGR can clearly discriminates temperature-dependent phenotypes or temperature dependent drug effects.

    It records and analyses thermal preference/avoidance in mice. For neuropathic pain studies, peripheral neuropathy, temperature sensitivity and insensitivity assessment in basic research, phenotyping and drug screening.

    The animal is freely moving, its position is tracked by...

    Animal
    Mouse, Rat
    Plethysmometer Paw Volume and Oedema complete set up with all 4 tube dimensions available

    Measures small changes in volume & oedema (fluid retention) to gauge the inflammatory response such as for anti-inflammatory screening tests.

    Hands-free operation. Precision measurements. Detects and displays 0.01 ml changes in rodent paw volume. Easy data transfer and software included.

  • Animal
    Mouse
    Climbing Test front view. he system is composed of 4 channel electronic unit, climbing cylinder and ceiling

    Climbing behavior can be of interest for the most diverse applications.

    The Ugo Basile automated system replicates its first manual application in the Pain field, for measuring Pain-Depressed behavior. It showed that, while mild analgesics block pain-depressed climbing, strong analgesics fail to alleviate depression of climbing (Santos et al. 2023, “Climbing behavior by mice as an...