To begin, lay an eight to 10 weeks anesthetized C57 black six male mouse on the surgical bench. Using blunt forceps, pull out the tongue and hold it with fingers. Insert a laryngoscope into the mouth and visualize the vocal cord.
Stabilize the mouse chin on the laryngoscope and hold the 20 gauge intravenous, or IV catheter with a guide wire inserted in it. Then slightly insert the guide wire into the vocal cord and slowly push the 20 gauge IV catheter into the trachea until its wing part is even with the nose tip. Once the mouse is connected to the ventilator, keep it in a lateral position with the right temporal area facing up.
Maintain the rectal temperature at 37 degrees Celsius using a heating pad and a heat lamp. After locating the zygomatic arch and incising the temporal muscle, use two forceps to dissect the underlying zygomatic arch and expose the joint between the maxilla and zygomatic bones. Then using scissors, cut a three millimeter portion of the zygomatic arch and remove it.
Finally, separate the masseter muscle from the skull base. Position four small retractors in different directions and expose the cranial skull base with one retractor pulling the trigeminal nerve branches laterally. Apply a saline drop to the skull above the middle cerebral artery, or MCA trunk and proximal to the rhinal cortex branch.
Use an electrical grinder to thin the skull until a small fracture is visible. And with the tip of the forceps, remove the thin skull. Place a single-strand loop of black braided silk on top of the MCA.
Then insert an 8-O microsurgical needle to lift the MCA trunk and tie the suture under the needle, leaving the needle's two ends on top of the silk thread loop knot. For transient middle cerebral artery occlusion, or MCAO, slightly tighten the silk thread knot under the needle to block arterial blood flow, representing MCAO onset. Use the forceps to hold the suture and slowly remove the needle at the end of the ischemia.
The laser speckle contrast imaging confirmed the reduced blood supply in the right MCA. For transient MCAO after suture removal, the cerebral blood flow reperfusion was evident, and further improved after 24 hours. TTC staining of the brain after 24 hours of stroke demonstrated the generation of infarcted tissue in both the cortical and lateral striatum areas in young and aged mice.
The infarct size was moderate compared to filament MCAO.