Stroke, Vol 20, 1085-1088, Copyright © 1989 by American Heart Association
CS Atkinson, GA Press, P Lyden and B Katz
Clinical and pathologic observations have suggested analogies between the
developing nervous system of ferrets (Mustela putorius furo) and those of
more traditional animal models employed in stroke research. Experimental
work has demonstrated advantages of the ferret as a model of visual
development. We performed in vivo cerebral angiography and postmortem
neurovascular dissection of latex-injected specimens of adult ferrets. The
great vessels include a cervical arterial trunk that gives rise to both
carotid arteries. The anatomy of the cranial arteries is similar to that of
rabbits. No carotid rete mirabile is present. There are no intracranial
anastomoses between the external and internal carotid systems. We present
in vivo cerebral angiograms with pathologic correlation that demonstrate
that ferrets may provide the same anatomic advantages as a rabbit model for
the experimental study of cerebrovascular disease, with the additional
advantage of a long extracranial cervical segment of the carotid artery,
affording easier access to the intracranial vasculature.
ARTICLES
The ferret as an animal model in cerebrovascular research
Department of Ophthalmology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla.
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