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Title: Morphometric study of focal cerebral ischemia in rats: a stereological evaluation. Author: Avendaño C, Roda JM, Carceller F, Díez-Tejedor E. Journal: Brain Res; 1995 Feb 27; 673(1):83-92. PubMed ID: 7757483. Abstract: An efficient, unbiased stereological method for estimating and evaluating volumetric parameters of cortical infarction is presented. Long-Evans rats were subjected to a standard procedure for achieving focal cerebral ischemia, consisting of permanent ligation of the right middle cerebral artery and temporary occlusion of both common carotid arteries. Animals were killed 24 h later by perfusion fixation and the brains were embedded in celloidin, serially sectioned at 60 microns and stained with Cresyl violet. All cases showed identifiable areas of infarction of variable extent within the territory of the right middle cerebral artery. Involvement of allocortical or subcortical structures was variable and in three cases there were small foci of infarct in the contralateral hemisphere. The absolute volumes of the infarcted tissue and of the spared cortex of both hemispheres were obtained by means of an unbiased estimator of volume based on Cavalieri's principle. The best estimate of the actual amount of infarcted cortex was found to be given by the volume ratio between the spared cortex of the right (infarcted) hemisphere and the total cortex of the left (control) hemisphere. This approach avoided the error introduced by the accompanying edema and decreased the observed interanimal variance. Sample size predictions for therapeutic-pharmacological trials show that relatively few animals would be needed using the model of ischemia and quantitative morphometry presented here to detect a 30-40% change in infarct volume.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]