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Transcranial contrast-enhanced ultrasound in the rat brain reveals substantial hyperperfusion acutely post-stroke

journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-01, 00:00 authored by D Premilovac, S J Blackwood, C J Ramsay, Michelle KeskeMichelle Keske, D W Howells, B A Sutherland
Direct and real-time assessment of cerebral hemodynamics is key to improving our understanding of cerebral blood flow regulation in health and disease states such as stroke. While a number of sophisticated imaging platforms enable assessment of cerebral perfusion, most are limited either spatially or temporally. Here, we applied transcranial contrast-enhanced ultrasound (CEU) to measure cerebral perfusion in real-time through the intact rat skull before, during and after ischemic stroke, induced by intraluminal filament middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO). We demonstrate expected decreases in cortical and striatal blood volume, flow velocity and perfusion during MCAO. After filament retraction, blood volume and perfusion increased two-fold above baseline, indicative of acute hyperperfusion. Adjacent brain regions to the ischemic area and the contralateral hemisphere had increased blood volume during MCAO. We assessed our data using wavelet analysis to demonstrate striking vasomotion changes in the ischemic and contralateral cortices during MCAO and reperfusion. In conclusion, we demonstrate the application of CEU for real-time assessment of cerebral hemodynamics and show that the ischemic regions exhibit striking hyperemia post-MCAO. Whether this post-stoke hyperperfusion is sustained long-term and contributes to stroke severity is not known.

History

Journal

Journal of cerebral blood flow and metabolism

Volume

40

Issue

5

Pagination

939 - 953

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0271-678X

eISSN

1559-7016

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal