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Published Online
on March 20, 2008

Stroke. 2008
Published online before print March 20, 2008, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.107.502146
A more recent version of this article appeared on May 1, 2008
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Right arrow Angiogenesis
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Right arrow Computerized tomography and Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Submitted on August 16, 2007
Accepted on October 1, 2007

Angiogenesis Detected After Embolic Stroke in Rat Brain Using Magnetic Resonance T2*WI

Guangliang Ding PhD; Quan Jiang PhD; Lian Li PhD; Li Zhang MD; Zheng Gang Zhang PhD, MD; Karyn A. Ledbetter BS; Lakshman Gollapalli MS; Swayamprava Panda MS; Qingjiang Li MBA; James R. Ewing PhD; and Michael Chopp PhD*

From the Department of Neurology (G.D., Q.J., L.L., L.Z., Z.G.Z., K.A.L., L.G., S.P., Q.L., J.R.E., M.C.), Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Mich; the Department of Radiology (L.G.), Wayne State University, Detroit, Mich; and the Department of Physics (M.C.), Oakland University, Rochester, Mich.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: chopp{at}neuro.hfh.edu.

Background and Purpose—This study uses T2* weighted imaging (T2*WI) to measure the temporal evolution of cerebral angiogenesis in rats subjected to embolic stroke up to 6 weeks after stroke onset with or without sildenafil treatment.

Method—Male Wistar rats were subjected to embolic stroke and treated with saline (n=10) or with sildenafil (n=11), with treatment initiated at 24 hours and continued daily for 7 days after onset of ischemia. T2*WI measurements were performed at 24 hours after embolization and weekly up to 6 weeks using a 7-Tesla system. Histological measurements were obtained at 6 weeks after MRI scans.

Results—Using T2*WI, cerebral angiogenesis was detected starting from 4 weeks and from 2 weeks after onset of embolic stroke in saline and sildenafil treated rats, respectively. Significant differences in the temporal and spatial features of angiogenesis after embolic stroke up to 6 weeks after onset of stroke were found between saline and sildenafil treated rats and were identified with T2*WI. MRI permeability parameter, Ki, complementarily detected angiogenesis after ischemia in embolic stroke rats. Sildenafil treatment of stroke rats significantly enhanced the angiogenesis, as confirmed histologically.

Conclusions—T2*WI can quantitatively measure the temporal evolution of angiogenesis in rats subjected to embolic stroke. Compared to control rats, sildenafil treatment significantly increased angiogenesis in treated animals up to 6 weeks after stroke.


Key words: angiogenesis • embolic stroke • magnetic resonance imaging • sildenafil • T2* weighted imaging