animal experimentation in English

testing on animals, performing scientific trials on animals

Use "animal experimentation" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "animal experimentation" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "animal experimentation", or refer to the context using the word "animal experimentation" in the English Dictionary.

1. 16 The issue of animal experimentation is an emotive subject.

2. 8 The issue of animal experimentation is an emotive subject.

3. Apothesine is more toxic, as determined by animal experimentation, than procain, novocain or neocain

4. The Commission has been funding research for the replacement of animal experimentation by alternative methods since 1986.

5. Replies to his paper follow from an Antivivisectionist philosopher and an eminent pharmacologist long involved in animal experimentation

6. The last chapters, on animal experimentation, staining and methods of culture, are similar to those of all general Bacteriologies.

7. It is known that Atabrine, particularly in large doses, can be toxic to the human central nervous system as it produces psychoses; and animal experimentation and the reports of the intramuscular use of Atabrine musonate have shown that toxicity can take the form of epileptiform seizures.

8. In simultaneously describing the history of animal experimentation and the development of anaesthetics and analgesics from an Anglocentric perspective, this article reveals how the latter have considerably refined animal experiments and brought benefits to both science and the animals involved—particularly in the 19th and 20th centuries.

9. Although other nations of continental Europe were also advancing towards standardizing animal experimentation, it was France that, because of its post-revolutionary cultural and ideological innovations and its proximity, particularly provoked the British Antivivisection movement, unleashing a wave of unprecedented social activism in relation to animal protection in the name of mercy.

10. Whereas, in the past it was recognized that vinyl chloride monomer was capable of giving rise only to the generally reversible disease known as "occupational acro-osteolysis" ; whereas more recent evidence from epidemiological studies and animal experimentation indicates that prolonged and/or repeated exposure to high concentrations of vinyl chloride monomer in the atmosphere may give rise to a "vinyl chloride monomer" syndrome encompassing, in addition to occupational acro-osteolysis, the skin disease scleroderma and liver disorders;