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A modified double injection model of cisterna magna for the study of delayed cerebral vasospasm following subarachnoid hemorrhage in rats.

Furat RaslanChristiane Albert-WeißenbergerThomas WestermaierSaker SakerChristoph KleinschnitzJin-Yul Lee
Published in: Experimental & translational stroke medicine (2012)
Delayed cerebral vasospasm following subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a serious medical complication, characterized by constriction of cerebral arteries leading to varying degrees of cerebral ischemia. Numerous clinical and experimental studies have been performed in the last decades; however, the pathophysiologic mechanism of cerebral vasospasm after SAH still remains unclear. Among a variety of experimental SAH models, the double hemorrhage rat model involving direct injection of autologous arterial blood into the cisterna magna has been used most frequently for the study of delayed cerebral vasospasm following SAH in last years. Despite the simplicity of the technique, the second blood injection into the cisterna magna may result in brainstem injury leading to high mortality. Therefore, a modified double hemorrhage model of cisterna magna has been developed in rat recently. We describe here step by step the surgical technique to induce double SAH and compare the degree of vasospasm with other cisterna magna rat models using histological assessment of the diameter and cross-sectional area of the basilar artery.
Keyphrases
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • cerebral ischemia
  • brain injury
  • cross sectional
  • oxidative stress
  • type diabetes
  • ultrasound guided
  • risk factors
  • stem cells
  • cardiovascular disease
  • spinal cord
  • bone marrow
  • blood brain barrier