| Literature DB >> 32048230 |
Jiahui Wang1, Ping Zhang2, Zhouping Tang3.
Abstract
Transient ischemic attack (TIA) is defined as a brief episode of neurological dysfunction caused by focal cerebral ischemia. TIA is a critical early warning signal of stroke. Patients with TIA may have long-term cognitive decline. The pathogenesis and pathological changes of TIA have not been fully elucidated. Animal models can simulate the process of human diseases and are essential tools to investigate injury mechanisms and therapeutic approaches of TIA. Most TIA animal models are based on ischemic stroke models and the definition of TIA. Each model has unique strengths and weaknesses. The establishment of a successful and reliable TIA model should follow three criteria: (1) objective evidence of cerebral arteries occlusion and reperfusion, (2) no permanent neurological deficit, and (3) no acute cerebral infarction. However, experimental animal models are impossible to be completely consistent with human TIA, because TIA itself is a heterogeneous disease. In the present review, the selection of animals, methodological development, and evaluation of cerebral blood flow of animal models of TIA are comprehensively evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: Animal model; Cerebral blood flow monitoring; Transient ischemic attack
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32048230 PMCID: PMC7083805 DOI: 10.1007/s13760-020-01295-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neurol Belg ISSN: 0300-9009 Impact factor: 2.396
Common animal models of ischemia and their use for TIA modeling
| Model | Method | Features | Applications | Use for TIA modeling | Details of inducing TIA |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Craniotomy model | Mechanically interrupts the distal blood flow of the MCA | Good reproducibility Visual confirmation of successful MCAO | Histopathological study of TIA | Yes | Occludes the distal MCA with microvascular clip for 15 min [ |
| Intraluminal suture MCAO model | Blocks the origin of the MCA by a suture | Highly controllable ischemia-reperfusion | Histopathological study of TIA | Yes | Different blocking duration (Table |
| Photothrombosis model | Irradiates the exposed skull after the injection of a photoactive dye | Desired brain ischemic lesions | Study of antiplatelet, anticoagulation and endothelium protection therapy | Yes | Injects Rose Bengal (10 mg/ml in concentration) into the tail vein at 0.2 ml/100 g body weight and illuminates for 3 min using a 5 mW, 532 nm CW laser light [ |
| Endothelin-1 model | Injects ET-1 into the brain parenchyma | Purely ischemic injury Localized and specific lesions | Histopathological study of cerebral ischemia | No | / |
| Embolic model | Injects fresh clots or lipid microparticles into the carotid artery | Mimics human TIA more closely | Study on the treatment of TIA | Yes | Injects 0.5 mg of melted solid lipid microparticles (75–90 μm in diameter) via a carotid artery catheter [ |
| Platelet aggregatio | Infuses collagen fibrils or ADP into the carotid artery | More variability in the experimental outcomes | Study on the mechanism of TIA | Yes | Infuses ADP (8 mg per min for 5 min) into the carotid artery [ |
TIA transient ischemic attack, MCA middle cerebral artery, MCAO middle cerebral artery occlusion, ET-1 endothelin-1, ADP adenosine diphosphate
Infarct thresholds of several mouse and rat strains (suture method)
| Species, strain | rCBF during occlusion (%) | Infarct threshold | The duration of MCAO for TIA model (min) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rat, SD [ | 20 | 10 min Hippocampal infarcts were observed in 33.3% (2/6) of rats* | < 5 |
| Rat, Wistar [ | 24 | 12.5 min Caudate nucleus infarcts were observed in 16.7% (1/6) of rats* | < 10 |
| Mouse, NMRI [ | 15 | 12.5 min Cortical infarcts were observed in 16.7% (1/6) of mice* | < 10 |
| Mouse, ICR-CD1 [ | 15 | 10 min Striatal infarcts were observed in 50.0% of mice* | < 10 |
| Mouse, C57BL/6 [ | 34 | No infarcts were found in any mice after MCAO for 5 min* |
rCBF relative cerebral blood flow, which is the percentage of CBF in the basal CBF
*Infarcts that were confirmed by MRI; as shown in the table, 10 min can be selected for TIA-related study in the pre-experiment
Comparison of cerebral blood flow monitoring methods in TIA models
| Theory | Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|---|
| LDF | Laser Doppler frequency deviation | Easy operation | Limited to the cortical surface measurement* |
| Low invasiveness | Single point measurement# | ||
| High sensitivity | Relative measurement value | ||
| Ability to monitor CBF quickly, continuously, and in real time | Highly susceptible to environment and activities (e.g., indoor light, surgery operation, animal breathing) | ||
| LSCI | Random interference | Non-contact | Limited to the cortical surface measurement |
| Minimally invasive | Not suitable for monitoring CBF continuously | ||
| Broad measurement range | Relative measurement value | ||
| High spatio-temporal resolution | Requires thinning the skull for animals with thick skulls (high technical difficulty, and not conducive to long-term measurement) | ||
| Ability to measure multiple microcirculation parameters (e.g., vascular diameter, vascular density) | |||
| MRA | Inflow enhancement effect | Noninvasive | High requirements on equipment |
| Ability to display cerebral vessels clearly | High cost | ||
| Visual observation of cerebral vascular occlusion or patency | Inability to monitor CBF in real time | ||
| Hydrogen clearance | Tracer removal theory | Quantitative measurement | High invasiveness |
| High reliability | Unable to monitor CBF continuously | ||
| Low requirements on equipment | |||
| μECoG-fPAM [ | Electrophysiological function and microvascular resolution | Ability to monitor blood flow dynamics of deep cerebral vessels* | Requires complex equipment |
| High spatio-temporal resolution | Requires a high level of operational skill | ||
| Visual observation of cerebral vascular morphological changes | |||
| fUS [ | Pulse Doppler technology | Ability to monitor CBV of deep cerebral vessels* | Relative measurement value |
| Broad measurement range& | Unavoidable measurement error | ||
| High spatio-temporal resolution (100 μm and 400 ms, respectively) | Partial loss of blood flow data caused by the removal of blood vessels with slow flow rates | ||
| Suitable for real-time monitoring of CBF indifferent brain regions | |||
| Requires no anesthesia |
LDF laser Doppler flowmeter, CBF cerebral blood flow, LSCI laser speckle contrast imaging, MRA magnetic resonance angiography, μECoG-fPAM micro-electrocorticography-functional photoacoustic microscopy system, fUS functional ultrasound, CBV cerebral blood volume
*The measurement depth of LDF, μECoG-fPAM and fUS is 1 mm, 3 mm and 8 mm, respectively
#the measurement range of LDF is only 1 mm3
&the measurement width of fUS up to 12.8 mm