| Literature DB >> 2514176 |
J Prazma1, V N Carrasco, C G Garrett, H C Pillsbury.
Abstract
A technique is described for directly observing in vivo cochlear microvasculature in the gerbil for physiologic and experimentally induced changes in vessel diameter and blood flow velocity. Measurements are made from computer processed video images of surgically exposed microvessels. These images are obtained using intravital fluorescence microscopy (IFM) with epi-illumination. The Mongolian gerbil is an ideal animal model for circulatory studies of the inner ear. It has a stable heart rate and blood pressure under urethane/alpha-chloralose anesthesia and its cochlea is surgically accessible. A window is created over the feeding artery (anterior inferior cerebellar artery) and over the stria vascularis of the second turn of the cochlea, atraumatically exposing radiating arterioles and strial capillaries. Our system of IFM provides images that are videorecorded, digitally analyzed with a computer image processor, and enhanced according to the type of measurement desired. Velocity measurements are obtained by tracking plasma gaps or single fluorescent labeled red blood cells through successive frames of the videorecorded images. This experimental technique allows us to analyze circulatory responsiveness to a variety of vasoactive drugs administered regionally to the cochlea in concentrations not affecting systemic circulation.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2514176 DOI: 10.1016/0378-5955(89)90147-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hear Res ISSN: 0378-5955 Impact factor: 3.208