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on March 6, 2008

Stroke. 2008
Published online before print March 6, 2008, doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.107.503565
A more recent version of this article appeared on May 1, 2008
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Submitted on August 31, 2007
Revised on October 1, 2007
Accepted on October 3, 2007

MRI Detection of Secondary Damage After Stroke. Chronic Iron Accumulation in the Thalamus of the Rat Brain

Carles Justicia PhD; Pedro Ramos-Cabrer PhD; and Mathias Hoehn PhD*

From the In-vivo-NMR-Laboratory (C.J., P.R.-C., M.H.), Max Planck Institute for Neurological Research, Cologne, Germany; Brain Ischemia and Neurodegeneration (C.J.), IIBB-CSIC, IDIBAPS, Barcelona, Spain; and Clinical Neurosciences Research Laboratory (P.R.-C.), Hospital Clínico Universitario, Santiago de Compostela, Spain.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mathias{at}nf.mpg.de.

Background and Purpose—Iron plays a central role in many metabolic processes. Under certain pathological situations it accumulates, producing negative effects such as increasing damage by oxidative stress. The present study examined long-term iron accumulation in a stroke model with secondary degeneration, using MRI and histological techniques.

Methods—Male Wistar rats (n=22) were subjected to 60 minutes MCA occlusion. MR images (T2- and T2*-weighted) were obtained weekly between weeks 1 and 7 after reperfusion, and at weeks 10, 14, 20, and 24. Histological iron detection and immunohistochemical examination for different markers (NeuN, GFAP, OX-42, HO-1, and APP) were performed at the 3 survival time points (3, 7, and 24 weeks).

Results—Infarcts affecting MCA territory were evident on T2-weighted imaging, and all animals showed deficits on behavioral tests. In the thalamus, T2 hyperintensity was detected 3 weeks after stroke, and disappeared around week 7 when T2*-weighted images showed a marked hypointensity in that area. Histology revealed neuronal loss in the thalamus, accompanied by strong microglial reactivity and microglial HO-1 expression. APP deposits were detected in the thalamus from week 3 on and persisted until week 24. Iron storage was detected in microglia at week 3, in the parenchyma at week 7, and around APP deposits at week 24.

Conclusions—T2*-weighted MRI allows the detection of secondary damage in the thalamus after MCAO. Iron accumulation in the thalamus is mediated by HO-1 expression in reactive microglia.


Key words: transient cerebral ischemia • thalamus • magnetic resonance imaging • iron • heme-oxigenase-1