Stroke, Vol 20, 938-946, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
R Schmidt-Kastner, W Paschen, BG Ophoff and KA Hossmann
The four-vessel occlusion (4VO) model of Pulsinelli and Brierley (Stroke
1979;10:267-272) has been modified for use in halothane-nitrous
oxide-anesthetized, physiologically controlled rats that were ventilating
spontaneously. Selection criteria for the classification of severity of
ischemia were established by correlating changes in the
electroencephalogram and the general physiological status with measurements
of regional blood flow and regional energy metabolism. In 13% of animals,
4VO did not cause flattening of the electroencephalogram, and such animals
were classified as undergoing only "oligemia." In 65% of rats, the
electroencephalogram flattened and blood pressure sharply increased with
4VO, whereas spontaneous respiration continued. This group exhibited almost
complete ischemia in autoradiographic blood-flow studies, severe acidosis,
and depletion of adenosine 5'-triphosphate and glucose in the forebrain
and, hence, was classified as the "ischemia" group. The remaining 22%
stopped breathing after vascular occlusion and were rejected for further
study. Survival experiments of ischemic animals revealed the typical
postischemic sequelae, with primary metabolic recovery after 8 hours of
recirculation in all brain structures followed after 8-24 hours by severe
biochemical deterioration and neuronal death in the striatum and
hippocampus. Postischemic seizure activity was rare. The main advantages of
the present modification in comparison with the original method are 1) the
application of anesthesia without loss of primary selection criteria, 2)
the possibility of invasive physiological monitoring, and 3) the absence of
postischemic seizures, which eliminates the necessity for secondary
selection criteria.
ARTICLES
A modified four-vessel occlusion model for inducing incomplete forebrain ischemia in rats
Max-Planck-Institute for Neurological Research, Cologne, Federal Republic of Germany.
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