Stroke, Vol 21, 124-132, Copyright © 1990 by American Heart Association
K Sakatani, H Iizuka and W Young
We recorded somatosensory evoked potentials in pentobarbital- anesthetized
rats before and after middle cerebral artery occlusion. Trigeminal
(vibrissae), median (forelimb), and sciatic (hind limb) nerve stimuli
produced consistent, robust, and sharply localized responses in the
trigeminal, forelimb, and hind limb regions of the somatosensory cortex of
18 rats. These regions are situated at sequentially greater distances from
the center of infarcts produced by middle cerebral artery occlusion. In
eight rats, occlusion 1-2 mm below the rhinal fissure abolished
somatosensory evoked potentials in all three cortical region within
minutes. Positive wavelets preceding the primary cortical response were
also diminished by the occlusion, suggesting that ischemia affected the
thalamocortical white matter. Four of these eight rats did not show
histologically apparent ischemic involvement of the hind limb cortical
region at 3 hours after occlusion; sciatic nerve evoked potentials
recovered substantially in all four rats, and the amplitudes exceeded
baseline (129 +/- 30% at 1 hour, 173 +/- 33% at 3 hours) in three of the
four rats. Three of the eight rats did not have gross ischemic involvement
of the forelimb cortical region; median nerve evoked potentials recovered
fully in all eight rats, but the amplitudes did not exceed baseline. All
eight rats had evidence of ischemic damage in the trigeminal cortex; no rat
showed full recovery in this region, and all but one had trigeminal evoked
potentials that were less than 20% of baseline amplitudes by 3 hours after
occlusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Somatosensory evoked potentials in rat cerebral cortex before and after middle cerebral artery occlusion
Department of Neurosurgery, New York University Medical Center, NY 10016.
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