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Establishment of a reproducible and minimally invasive ischemic stroke model in swine
Carlos Castaño, … , Antoni Dávalos, Teresa Gasull
Carlos Castaño, … , Antoni Dávalos, Teresa Gasull
Published February 28, 2023
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2023;8(8):e163398. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.163398.
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Resource and Technical Advance Neuroscience

Establishment of a reproducible and minimally invasive ischemic stroke model in swine

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Abstract

The need for advances in the management/treatment options for ischemic stroke patients requires that upcoming preclinical research uses animals with more human-like brain characteristics. The porcine brain is considered appropriate, although the presence of the rete mirabile (RM) prevents direct catheterization of the intracranial arteries to produce focal cerebral ischemia. To develop a reproducible minimally invasive porcine stroke model, a guide catheter and guide wire were introduced through the femoral artery until reaching the left RM. Using the pressure cooker technique, Squid-12 embolization material was deposited to fill, overflow, and occlude the left RM, the left internal carotid artery, and left circle of Willis wing up to the origins of the middle cerebral arteries (MCAs), mimicking the occlusion produced in the filament model in rodents. Longitudinal multimodal cerebral MRI was conducted to assess the brain damage and cerebral blood supply. The technique we describe here occluded up to the origins of the MCAs in 7 of 8 swine, inducing early damage 90 minutes after occlusion that later evolved to a large cerebral infarction and producing no mortality during the intervention. This minimally invasive ischemic stroke model in swine produced reproducible infarcts and shows translational features common to human stroke.

Authors

Carlos Castaño, Marc Melià-Sorolla, Alexia García-Serran, Núria DeGregorio-Rocasolano, Maria Rosa García-Sort, María Hernandez-Pérez, Adrián Valls-Carbó, Osvaldo Pino, Jordi Grífols, Alba Iruela-Sánchez, Alicia Palomar-García, Josep Puig, Octavi Martí-Sistac, Antoni Dávalos, Teresa Gasull

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Figure 3

Infarct volume and midline shift determination through MRI.

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Infarct volume and midline shift determination through MRI.
(A and B) 3D...
(A and B) 3D Slicer software was used to delineate and color (in yellow) the 2D hyperintense areas in DWI axial slice images to render a reconstructed 3D view of the damage in the whole brain. (C and D) Quantification of the maximal infarct for the 7 swine (6 Duroc × Landrace, plus 1 miniature pig (blue dot) in the infarct (%) graph) that underwent a successful occlusion of the CW/MCAs confluence, as expressed in absolute volume (C) and percentage of the ipsilateral hemisphere volume (D). Separate female and male graphs are also depicted (pale), showing a similar degree of infarction (female vs. male comparisons were made using the 2-tailed t test in C and the U test in D). (E) Axial and coronal MRI images showing the midline shift at 1 day (n = 5); straight broken line represents the theoretical midline, and the green line shows the actual midline. (F) Graph depicting the maximal midline shift at 1 day. Mean ± SD are shown.

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