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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Experimental brain infarcts in cats. I. Pathophysiological observations.

K A Hossmann, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1980 - 
- Vol. 11, Iss: 6, pp 583-592
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TLDR
In 48 cases the left middle cerebral artery was occluded under light barbiturate anaesthesia using a transorbital approach as discussed by the authors, in which the animals were kept alive for 1, 2, and 4 hours after vascular occlusion, and at the end of experiments the density of regional ischemia was correlated with EEG changes and with the electrolyte, water and metabolite content of the same tissue samples in which blood flow was assessed.
Abstract
In 48 cases the left middle cerebral artery was occluded under light barbiturate anaesthesia using a transorbital approach The animals were kept alive for 1, 2, and 4 hours after vascular occlusion Regional cerebral blood flow was measured by the intracardiac microsphere injection technique before ischemia, 15 min after the onset of ischemia, and at the end of experiments The density of regional ischemia was correlated with EEG changes and with the electrolyte, water and metabolite content of the same tissue samples in which blood flow was assessed In the territory of the occluded middle cerebral artery, cortical blood flow decreased from 414 +/- 38 to 213 +/- 40 ml/100 g/min (means +/- SE), the actual flow rate depending on the individual efficacy of collateral blood supply At flow rates below 10--15 ml/100 g/min, ischemia involved more than 50% of the middle cerebral artery territory, water and electrolyte homeostasis was severely disturbed and ischemic brain edema developed Adenosine triphosphate decreased to about 60% of the control value at flow rates below 40 ml/100 g/min, but it remained at this level down to flow rates as low as 5 ml/100 g/min EEG intensity -- but not EEG frequency -- decreased in parallel with blood flow, indicating that with increasing density of ischemia an increasing portion of the excitable neuropil was inhibited The development of ischemic brain edema determined the further progression of ischemia When blood flow decreased below the threshold for water and ion disturbance, ischemia was progressive (critical ischemia), but an amelioration of flow occurred in animals in which flow remained above this level (non-critical ischemia) In the contralateral hemisphere the EEG, blood flow, water and electrolyte content did not change significantly during the initial few hours of ischemia Diaschisis, in consequence, was not a prominent feature during the early phase of infarct development

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Viability thresholds and the penumbra of focal ischemia.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the limited survival of the penumbra is due to periinfarct depolarizations, which result in repeated episodes of tissue hypoxia, because the increased metabolic workload is not coupled to an adequate increase of collateral blood supply.
Journal ArticleDOI

Edema and brain trauma

TL;DR: Findings suggest that cytotoxic and vasogenic brain edema are two entities which can be targeted simultaneously or according to their temporal prevalence following traumatic brain injury.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brain oedema in focal ischaemia: molecular pathophysiology and theoretical implications

TL;DR: A new theory is suggested suggesting that ischaemia-induced capillary dysfunction can be attributed to de novo synthesis of a specific ensemble of proteins that determine osmotic and hydraulic conductivity in Starling's equation, and whose expression is driven by a distinct transcriptional program.
Journal ArticleDOI

Focal Brain Ischemia in the Rat: Methods for Reproducible Neocortical Infarction Using Tandem Occlusion of the Distal Middle Cerebral and Ipsilateral Common Carotid Arteries

TL;DR: Tandem occlusion of the distal MCA and ipsilateral CCA in the SHR strain provides a surgically simple method for causing large neocortical infarcts with reproducible topography and volume.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental brain infarcts in cats. II. Ischemic brain edema.

F J Schuier, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1980 - 
TL;DR: It is concluded that the early ischemic brain edema following middle cerebral artery occlusion is of the cytotoxic type, that it develops at a flow rate below 10–15 ml/100 g/min, and that it is not strictly correlated with the energy state of the brain.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Circulation of the Fetus in Utero METHODS FOR STUDYING DISTRIBUTION OF BLOOD FLOW, CARDIAC OUTPUT AND ORGAN BLOOD FLOW

TL;DR: Experimental evidence is provided that (1) there is no significant recirculation of microspheres, (2) the distribution of spheres is proportional to flow, and (3) circulatory physiology is not altered by injection of spheres.
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Some sources of error in measuring regional blood flow with radioactive microspheres.

TL;DR: Varying numbers of microspheres were injected into the left atrium and ventricles of lambs, sheep, and dogs, and microsphere concentrations were measured in samples drawn simultaneously from two or more arteries (femoral, carotid, or aorta), in the free walls of the left and right ventricle and both kidneys.
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Cortical evoked potential and extracellular K+ and H+ at critical levels of brain ischemia.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that electrical failure in ischemia may be directly associated with a massive release of intracellular K+ or with a critical degree of extracellular acidosis is tested and the concept of an ischemic penumbra during which the neurons remain structurally intact but functionally inactive is supported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship between the cortical evoked potential and local cortical blood flow following acute middle cerebral artery occlusion in the baboon

TL;DR: The present experiments were designed to establish quantitatively the changes in electrical activity corresponding to different degrees of cerebral ischemia, and strongly suggested a threshold-type relationship between the amplitude of the evoked potential and the local blood flow.
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