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Method Article
Continuous arterial blood pressure recording allows the investigation of impacts of various hemodynamic parameters. This report demonstrates the application of continuous arterial blood pressure monitoring in a large animal model of ischemic stroke for determination of stroke pathophysiology, impact of different hemodynamic factors, and the assessment of novel treatment approaches.
Control of blood pressure, in terms of both absolute values and its variability, affects outcomes in ischemic stroke patients. However, it remains challenging to identify the mechanisms that lead to poor outcomes or evaluate measures by which these effects can be mitigated because of the prohibitive limitations inherent to human data. In such cases, animal models can be utilized to conduct rigorous and reproducible evaluations of diseases. Here we report refinement of a previously described model of ischemic stroke in rabbits that is augmented with continuous blood pressure recording to assess the impacts of modulation on blood pressure. Under general anesthesia, femoral arteries are exposed through surgical cutdowns to place arterial sheaths bilaterally. Under fluoroscopic visualization and roadmap guidance, a microcatheter is advanced into an artery of the posterior circulation of the brain. An angiogram is performed by injecting the contralateral vertebral artery to confirm occlusion of the target artery. With the occlusive catheter remaining in position for a fixed duration, blood pressure is continuously recorded to allow for tight titration of blood pressure manipulations, whether through mechanical or pharmacological means. At the completion of the occlusion interval, the microcatheter is removed, and the animal is maintained under general anesthesia for a prescribed length of reperfusion. For acute studies, the animal is then euthanized and decapitated. The brain is harvested and processed to measure the infarct volume under light microscopy and further assessed with various histopathological stains or spatial transcriptomic analysis. This protocol provides a reproducible model that can be utilized for more thorough preclinical studies on the effects of blood pressure parameters during ischemic stroke. It also facilitates effective preclinical evaluation of novel neuroprotective interventions that might improve care for ischemic stroke patients.
Ischemic stroke (IS) is a leading cause of death and long-term disability worldwide, and its prevalence is projected to increase as society ages1. While substantial advances have been made in acute interventions and secondary prevention strategies, adjunctive neuroprotective treatments have not followed apace2,3,4,5,6,7. Further research is needed into stroke pathobiology because mechanisms by which therapies may or may not prove effective are poorly understood. This is largely due to the heterogeneous nature of the stroke patient population, many of whom have numerous comorbidities that confound analysis1. One driver of limitations in research is the absence of tissue-level data-the gold standard in biomedical research-due to the prohibitive morbidity of sampling tissue from the human central nervous system. Specifically, vascular tissue harvesting in a living human would cause a stroke, so vascular tissue is typically only obtained at autopsy, which is under-representative of the general population and skews toward more advanced disease in elderly patients with concomitant diagnoses.
In such cases, when sufficient human data cannot be utilized, animal models can bridge the data gaps. Large animal models of stroke are limited as most large animals used in research are ungulates having a rete mirabile that prevents direct endovascular access to the cerebral arteries8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17. Rabbits have a long history of use for the investigation of cardiovascular disease, including intracranial pathologies8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17. Rabbits present an ideal model for cerebrovascular diseases because they are large enough for endovascular catheterization and lack the rete mirabile that precludes intracranial access in other large mammals9,15,16,17. They have been previously utilized specifically for the investigation of IS through precise and well-controlled occlusion of an intracranial artery with a microcatheter18.
Blood pressure (BP) control, both through modulation of absolute BP or BP variability (BPV), the degree to which arterial BP fluctuates around a mean BP, is an emerging potential therapeutic target for IS patients after reports of worse outcomes in those with poorly controlled BP or BPV19,20,21,22. Mechanistic investigation into how changes lead to poor outcomes in IS patients is lacking. This is partly due to the difficulty in obtaining tissue-level data and performing well-controlled analyses in humans. To test interventions that modulate BP or BPV, animal models must be utilized to overcome these limitations. This report describes the successful pairing of a previously validated rabbit model of IS using controlled occlusion of the posterior cerebral artery in conjunction with continuous intra-arterial measurement of BP18. The method presented here improves on the previous approaches to stroke pathophysiology by applying a validated and reproducible stroke model to a system in which precise measurement and control of BP can be achieved. In this refined model, infarct burden can be assessed with post-procedural histopathologic staining of the harvested brain, which is also amenable to various stains and more advanced analyses such as spatial transcriptomics. Additionally, the occluded posterior circulation artery can also be chosen to be evaluated for morbidity analysis following survival procedures.
This protocol is approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (University of Utah IACUC Protocol Number 21-09021). Mature New Zealand White rabbits are obtained from commercial vendors.
1. Animal acquisition
2. Anesthesia and monitoring
3. Surgical preparation
4. Arterial access
5. Cervicocerebral angiography and intracranial access
6. Blood pressure measurement and modulation
7. Euthanasia and tissue harvesting
In the initial experiments with this model, our group successfully achieved the desired outcome of a posterior cerebral or superior cerebellar artery occlusion in 12 out of 14 animals (85.7%). For the experiment, seven males and seven females were studied. The mean animal weight was 3.6 kg (± 0.46 kg). In the two animals in which success was not achieved, profound catheter-induced vasospasm precluded safe access to the intracranial circulation. In one rabbit, intracranial access could not be obtained due to occlusiv...
Substantial progress has been made in the management of IS, particularly considering advances in acute intervention and secondary prevention strategies. However, more work can be done to improve care for IS patients. Limited progress in other aspects of IS treatment, particularly in the realm of neuroprotection, likely results from the limitations in pathophysiological understanding of mechanistic processes at the tissue and molecular level. Impactful data from humans is unrealistic and likely impossible to acquire. In s...
MDA, GH, and MAJ are consultants for Certus Critical Care, Inc. MDA is a consultant for Johnson & Johnson.
The research reported in this publication was supported by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under Award Numbers UL1TR002538 and KL2TR002539 and by Transformational Grant 19TPA34910194 from the American Heart Association.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
3-0 Silk Suture | Ethicon | A184H | |
Buprenorphine | Sigma-Aldrich | B9275 | |
Catheter | Terumo | CG415 | 4F glide catheter |
Endovascular Pressure Sensor | Millar | SPR-524 | |
Euthasol | Virbac | PVS111 | |
Guidewire | Terumo | GR1804 | |
Iohexol | ThermoFisher | 466651000 | Iodinated Contrast |
Ketamine | Biorbyt | orb61131 | |
LabChart Software | ADInstruments | ||
Lidocaine | Spectrum | LI102 | |
Microcatheter | Medtronic | EV3 105-5056 | Marathon Microcatheter |
Microwire | Medtronic | EV3 103-0608 | Mirage Microwire |
PowerLab | ADInstruments | ||
Rabbit Brain 2mm Coronal Cutting Matrix | Ted Pella | 15026 | |
Saline | FisherScientific | 23-535435 | |
Sheath | Merit Medical | PSI-5F-11 | |
Xylazine | ThermoFisher | J61430.14 |
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