Abstract

Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is a major cause of stroke and dementia. Pathologically, three lesions are seen: small vessel arteriopathy, lacunar infarction, and diffuse white matter injury (leukoaraiosis). Appropriate experimental models would aid in understanding these pathologic states and also in preclinical testing of therapies. The objective was to perform a systematic review of animal models of SVD and determine whether these resemble four key clinicopathologic features: (1) small, discrete infarcts; (2) small vessel arteriopathy; (3) diffuse white matter damage; (4) cognitive impairment. Fifteen different models were included, under four categories: (1) embolic injuries (injected blood clot, photochemical, detergent-evoked); (2) hypoperfusion/ischaemic injury (bilateral common carotid occlusion/stenosis, striatal endothelin-1 injection, striatal mitotoxin 3-NPA); (3) hypertension-based injuries (surgical narrowing of the aorta, or genetic mutations, usually in the renin-angiotensin system); (4) blood vessel damage (injected proteases, endothelium-targeting viral infection, or genetic mutations affecting vessel walls). Chronic hypertensive models resembled most key features of SVD, and shared the major risk factors of hypertension and age with human SVD. The most-used model was the stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR-SP). No model described all features of the human disease. The optimal choice of model depends on the aspect of pathophysiology being studied.

Keywords

LeukoaraiosisMedicineStroke (engine)CardiologyPathologyEndotheliumStenosisVascular dementiaEndothelial dysfunctionWhite matterDiseaseDementiaInternal medicineMagnetic resonance imagingRadiology

MeSH Terms

AnimalsCerebral CortexCerebrovascular CirculationCerebrovascular DisordersDisease ModelsAnimalHumans

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Decline in the incidence of stroke.

Trommer et al 1 recently reported a patient who experienced focal cerebral ischemia in the postpartum period.They concluded that the changes present on angiography were a manife...

1988 Stroke 12 citations

Publication Info

Year
2008
Type
review
Volume
28
Issue
12
Pages
1877-1891
Citations
234
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

234
OpenAlex
11
Influential
214
CrossRef

Cite This

Atticus H. Hainsworth, Hugh S. Markus (2008). Do <i>in vivo</i> Experimental Models Reflect Human Cerebral Small Vessel Disease? a Systematic Review. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism , 28 (12) , 1877-1891. https://doi.org/10.1038/jcbfm.2008.91

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/jcbfm.2008.91
PMID
18698331

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%