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Title: An animal model of atherosclerotic plaque disruption and thrombosis in rabbit using pharmacological triggering to plaques induced by perivascular collar placement. Author: Sun X, Cao W, Cui J, Wang L, Ma L, Wang T, Peng C, Tian Z, Shi S, Guo S, Tian Y. Journal: Cardiovasc Pathol; 2013; 22(4):264-9. PubMed ID: 23452613. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Limited availability of suitable animal model of plaque disruption and thrombosis has hampered the study of mechanism and preclinical evaluation of plaque-stabilizing therapies. This study aims to develop an animal model of atherosclerotic plaque disruption and thrombosis in rabbit femoral artery. METHODS: Silastic collars were placed around the bilateral femoral arteries of rabbits, which had been fed with atherogenic diet for 7 days. After 28 days on the same diet, the rabbits received pharmacological triggering by intraperitoneal injection of Russell's viper venom (RVV, 0.15 mg/kg) followed by intravenous injection of histamine (0.02 mg/kg), and the animals were then processed for imageological and histological examinations. RESULTS: Perivascular collar placement of the femoral artery in high-cholesterol-fed rabbits for 28 days induced marked intimal hyperplasia, which was a lipid- and collagen-rich lesion that contained substantial amount of macrophages and smooth muscle cells. Subsequent histological analysis showed that the pharmacological triggering evoked plaque disruption and platelet- and fibrin-rich thrombi in the collared femoral arteries. CONCLUSION: We demonstrated, for the first time, a rabbit model of plaque disruption and thrombosis induced by the combination of perivascular collar placement, RVV, and histamine injections. This model can be rapidly formed, easily operated, and site controlled.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]