Stroke, Vol 20, 1071-1078, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
A Wakayama, R Graf, G Rosner and WD Heiss
A two-site middle cerebral artery occlusion model in rabbits was developed.
Platinum electrodes served for simultaneous recordings of regional cerebral
blood flow, auditory evoked potentials, and electroencephalogram in the
left and right auditory cortex and in the left medial geniculate body.
Auditory evoked potentials and regional cerebral blood flow were also
recorded in the subcortical white matter, and regional cerebral blood flow
was recorded in the internal capsule. Distal segment occlusion of the
middle cerebral artery caused severe cortical ischemia in four of 11
rabbits (Group I), accompanied by abolition of the auditory evoked
potential in the left auditory cortex and white matter and severe reduction
of the left electrocorticogram. Deep subcortical regions were affected
either little or not at all. In the remaining seven rabbits (Group II) with
only mild disturbance of cortical perfusion after distal middle cerebral
artery occlusion, additional clamping of the proximal middle cerebral
artery stem reduced thalamocortical tract blood flow and abolished cortical
auditory evoked potentials. Spontaneous electrocorticogram was less
affected in Group II than in Group I; thalamic regional cerebral blood flow
and auditory evoked potentials were not altered. Histologically, ischemic
lesions predominated in the cortex of Group I and in the subcortical
structures of Group II rabbits. While correlated reductions in regional
cerebral blood flow and auditory evoked potentials indicate effective
cortical ischemia, the impairment of auditory evoked potentials in Group II
rabbits must be due to cortical deafferentation by ischemia in the afferent
tract. This model permits the investigation of the effects of predominantly
cortical or subcortical ischemia in one functional system.
ARTICLES
Deafferentation versus cortical ischemia in a rabbit model of middle cerebral artery occlusion
Max-Planck-Institut fur neurologische Forschung, Koln, Federal Republic of Germany.
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