Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Unilateral intracarotid injection of holmium microspheres to induce bilateral MRI-validated cerebral embolization in rats.
- Journal:
- Journal of neuroscience methods
- Year:
- 2009
- Authors:
- de Lange, Fellery et al.
- Affiliation:
- University Medical Center Utrecht · Netherlands
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cerebral embolization models have been hindered by the fact that delivery is predominantly one-sided and cannot be quantified easily. We have developed a model for bilateral cerebral micro-embolization. By using holmium microspheres, it is possible to quantify intracerebral delivery using MRI. METHODS: To validate the quantification of holmium microspheres a phantom study was performed in which concentration of microspheres in solution was compared with the number of holmium-induced artifacts on MRI. After that identical microspheres were administered by unilateral injection in the carotid artery, while the opposite carotid artery was clamped. On post-injection MRI scans, intracerebral delivery and right/left distribution of the microspheres was determined. RESULTS: In the phantom study it was shown that quantification by MRI is possible and that MRI artifacts represent single microspheres. In the rat brain, about one-third of the injected dose was consistently located on the contralateral side. The administration was reproducible regarding distribution and number of microspheres. CONCLUSIONS: The use of holmium microspheres enables quantification of delivered dose as single microspheres induce artifacts on MRI. By clamping the contralateral carotid artery, one-third of the dose is diverted to the contralateral hemisphere.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18840466/