A non-human primate model of stroke reproducing endovascular thrombectomy and allowing long-term imaging and neurological read-outs

Archive ouverte

Debatisse, Justine | Wateau, Océane | Cho, Tae-Hee | Costes, Nicolas | Mérida, Inés | Léon, Christelle | Langlois, Jean-Baptiste | Taborik, Fabrice | Verset, Michaël | Portier, Karine | Aggour, Mohamed | Troalen, Thomas | Villien, Marjorie | Makris, Nikolaos | Tourvieille, Christian | Le Bars, Didier | Lancelot, Sophie | Confais, Joachim | Oudotte, Adrien | Nighoghossian, Norbert | Ovize, Michel | Vivien, Denis | Contamin, Hugues | Agin, Véronique | Canet-Soulas, Emmanuelle | Eker, Omer Faruk

Edité par CCSD ; Nature Publishing Group -

International audience. Stroke is a devastating disease. Endovascular mechanical thrombectomy is dramatically changing the management of acute ischemic stroke, raising new challenges regarding brain outcome and opening up new avenues for brain protection. In this context, relevant experiment models are required for testing new therapies and addressing important questions about infarct progression despite successful recanalization, reversibility of ischemic lesions, blood-brain barrier disruption and reperfusion damage. Here, we developed a minimally invasive non-human primate model of cerebral ischemia (Macaca fascicularis) based on an endovascular transient occlusion and recanalization of the middle cerebral artery (MCA). We evaluated per-occlusion and post-recanalization impairment on PET-MRI, in addition to acute and chronic neuro-functional assessment. Voxel-based analyses between per-occlusion PET-MRI and day-7 MRI showed two different patterns of lesion evolution: "symptomatic salvaged tissue" (SST) and "asymptomatic infarcted tissue" (AIT). Extended SST was present in all cases. AIT, remote from the area at risk, represented 45% of the final lesion. This model also expresses both worsening of fine motor skills and dysexecutive behavior over the chronic post-stroke period, a result in agreement with cortical-subcortical lesions. We thus fully characterized an original translational model of ischemia-reperfusion damage after stroke, with consistent ischemia time, and thrombus retrieval for effective recanalization.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

PET-MRI nanoparticles imaging of blood–brain barrier damage and modulation after stroke reperfusion

Archive ouverte | Debatisse, Justine | CCSD

International audience. In an acute ischaemic stroke, understanding the dynamics of blood-brain barrier injury is of particular importance for the prevention of symptomatic haemorrhagic transformation. However, the ...

Spatio-Temporal Characterization of Brain Inflammation in a Non-human Primate Stroke Model Mimicking Endovascular Thrombectomy

Archive ouverte | Becker, Guillaume | CCSD

International audience. Reperfusion therapies in acute ischemic stroke have demonstrated their efficacy in promoting clinical recovery. However, ischemia/reperfusion injury and related inflammation remain a major ch...

Quantitative imaging outperforms No-reflow in predicting functional outcomes in a translational stroke model

Archive ouverte | Debatisse, Justine | CCSD

International audience. Microvascular dysfunction and no-reflow are considered a major cause of secondary damage despite revascularization in acute ischemic stroke (AIS), ultimately affecting patient outcomes. We us...

Chargement des enrichissements...