Nudo Randolph J, Larson Diane, Plautz Erik J, Friel Kathleen M, Barbay Scott, Frost Shawn B
Center on Aging, Department of Physiology, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, USA.
ILAR J. 2003;44(2):161-74. doi: 10.1093/ilar.44.2.161.
Nonhuman primate models of poststroke recovery have become increasingly rare primarily due to high purchase and maintenance costs and limited availability of nonhuman primate species. Despite this obstacle, nonhuman primate models may offer important advantages over rodent models for understanding many of the brain's mechanisms for self-repair due to greater similarity in cortical organization to humans. Since the mid-1990s, surgical, neurophysiological, and neuroanatomical methods have been developed to understand structural and functional remodeling of the cerebral cortex after an ischemic event, such as occurs in stroke. These methods require long surgical procedures and entail constant physiological monitoring. With careful attention to intraoperative and postsurgical monitoring, these procedures can be repeated multiple times in individual monkeys without untoward events. This model provides a statistically powerful approach for tracking brain plasticity in the ensuing weeks and months after a stroke-like injury, reducing the number of animals required for individual experiments. This methodology is described in detail, and many of the resulting findings that are relevant for understanding stroke recovery and the effects of rehabilitative and pharmacotherapeutic interventions are summarized.
由于购买和维护成本高昂以及非人灵长类物种的供应有限,中风后恢复的非人灵长类动物模型已变得越来越稀少。尽管存在这一障碍,但由于非人灵长类动物模型在皮质组织方面与人类具有更大的相似性,因此在理解大脑自我修复的许多机制方面可能比啮齿动物模型具有重要优势。自20世纪90年代中期以来,已经开发了手术、神经生理学和神经解剖学方法来了解缺血事件(如中风时发生的情况)后大脑皮质的结构和功能重塑。这些方法需要长时间的外科手术,并需要持续的生理监测。通过仔细关注术中和术后监测,这些程序可以在个体猴子身上重复多次而不会出现不良事件。该模型为追踪中风样损伤后接下来几周和几个月内的大脑可塑性提供了一种具有统计学效力的方法,减少了单个实验所需的动物数量。本文详细描述了这种方法,并总结了许多与理解中风恢复以及康复和药物治疗干预效果相关的研究结果。