Abstract

Focal cerebral ischemia was produced in 45 rats by occlusion of the left middle cerebral artery. Groups of rats were investigated over a long period after occlusion, that is, from a few hours to 42 days after the production of focal ischemia. Light microscopy showed infarcts in the frontoparietal cortex and the lateral caudoputamen. The ischemic changes closely resembled those found in ischemic infarcts in humans and followed a similar pattern over time. Measurements of the sizes of the infarct, the ipsilateral (operated) hemisphere, and the contralateral hemisphere from camera lucida drawings revealed that the infarct size changed with time after occlusion. Rats killed during the first 7 days (acute phase) had the largest infarcts; in rats killed thereafter, the infarct size diminished. The size of the ipsilateral hemisphere also changed with time; during the first 7 days after occlusion this hemisphere was swollen and larger than the contralateral hemisphere. We suggest that these acute changes are caused by cerebral edema. After the first 7 days, enlargement of the ipsilateral hemisphere gave way to a significant reduction in the size of both the ipsilateral hemisphere and the infarct. We believe that the major reasons for this shift in size are resorption of fluid together with diminished production of edema and elimination of dead cells by macrophages. We suggest that the amount of tissue loss (i.e., the degree of atrophy and the remaining infarct "scar") found 21-42 days after occlusion (during the late phase) is a measure of the total amount of tissue that succumbed as a consequence of ischemia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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