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A blinded randomized assessment of laser Doppler flowmetry efficacy in standardizing outcome from intraluminal filament MCAO in the rat.

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Date
2015-02
Authors
Taninishi, Hideki
Jung, Jin Yong
Izutsu, Miwa
Wang, Zhengfeng
Sheng, Huaxin
Warner, David S
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Abstract
<h4>Background</h4>Laser Doppler flowmetry (LDF) is widely used for estimating cerebral blood flow changes during intraluminal middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO). No investigation has systematically examined LDF efficacy in standardizing outcome. We examined MCAO histologic and behavioral outcome as a function of LDF measurement.<h4>Materials and methods</h4>Rats were subjected to 90min MCAO by 4 surgeons having different levels of MCAO surgical experience. LDF was measured in all rats during ischemia. By random assignment, LDF values were (Assisted) or were not (Blinded) made available to each surgeon during MCAO (n=12-17 per group). Neurologic and histologic outcomes were measured 7 days post-MCAO. A second study examined LDF effects on 1-day post-MCAO outcome.<h4>Results</h4>Pooled across surgeons, intra-ischemic %LDF change (P=0.12), neurologic scores (Assisted vs. Blinded=14±6 vs. 13±7, P=0.61, mean±standard deviation) and cerebral infarct volume (162±63mm(3)vs. 143±86mm(3), P=0.24) were not different between groups. Only for one surgeon (novice) did LDF use alter infarct volume (145±28mm(3)vs. 98±61mm(3), P=0.03). LDF use decreased infarct volume coefficient of variation (COV) by 35% (P=0.02), but had no effect on neurologic score COV.<h4>Comparison with existing methods</h4>We compared intraluminal MCAO outcome as a function of LDF use.<h4>Conclusions</h4>LDF measurement altered neither neurologic nor histologic MCAO outcome. LDF did not decrease neurologic deficit COV, but did decrease infarct volume COV. LDF may allow use of fewer animals if infarct volume is the primary dependent variable, but is unlikely to impact requisite sample sizes if neurologic function is of primary interest.
Type
Journal article
Subject
Animals
Rats
Rats, Wistar
Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery
Nylons
Laser-Doppler Flowmetry
Random Allocation
Single-Blind Method
Male
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23270
Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1016/j.jneumeth.2014.12.006
Publication Info
Taninishi, Hideki; Jung, Jin Yong; Izutsu, Miwa; Wang, Zhengfeng; Sheng, Huaxin; & Warner, David S (2015). A blinded randomized assessment of laser Doppler flowmetry efficacy in standardizing outcome from intraluminal filament MCAO in the rat. Journal of neuroscience methods, 241. pp. 111-120. 10.1016/j.jneumeth.2014.12.006. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/23270.
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Scholars@Duke

Sheng

Huaxin Sheng

Associate Professor in Anesthesiology
We have successfully developed various rodent models of brain and spinal cord injuries in our lab, such as focal cerebral ischemia, global cerebral ischemia, head trauma, subarachnoid hemorrhage, intracerebral hemorrhage, spinal cord ischemia and compression injury. We also established cardiac arrest and hemorrhagic shock models for studying multiple organ dysfunction.  Our current studies focus on two projects. One is to examine the efficacy of catalytic antioxidant in treating cerebral is
Warner

David Samuel Warner

Distinguished Distinguished Professor of Anesthesiology, in the School of Medicine
Humans may sustain a variety of forms of acute central nervous system injury including ischemia, trauma, vasospasm, and perinatal hypoxemia. The Multidisciplinary Neuroprotection Laboratories is dedicated to examining the pathophysiology of acute brain and spinal cord injury with particular reference to disease states managed in the perioperative or neurointensive care environments. Rodent recovery models of cerebral ischemia, traumatic brain injury, cardiopulmonary bypass, subarachnoid he
This author no longer has a Scholars@Duke profile, so the information shown here reflects their Duke status at the time this item was deposited.
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