Experimental intracerebral hemorrhage: Description of a double injection model in rats

Abstract
For experimental purposes, f/ie mosf common technique of producing an intracerebral hematoma in rats is the injection of unclotted autologous blood. All modifications of this model share the problem that size and extension of the hematoma are not reproducible, because the injected blood either ruptures into the ventricular system or it extends to the subarachnoid or subdural space. Therefore a double injection model of experimental intracerebral hemorrhage in rats has been developed using 19 male Sprague-Dawley rats. After inducing anesthesia a cannula was stereotactically placed into the caudate nucleus and an intracerebral hematoma was produced with the double injection method in which first a small amount of fresh autologous blood is injected which is allowed to clot (preclotting) in order to block the way back along the needle track; the actual hematoma is produced in a second step of the injection. The clot volume was measured on stained serial sections. A total injection volume of 50 \i! of autologous blood produced intracerebral hematomas of 41.1 ± 10.0 \i\ and of similar shapes. The double injection method allows to generate reproducible hematomas in rats. This new model of intracerebral hemorrhage will allow further investigation of fibrinolytic and cytoprotective therapies. [Neurol Res 1996; 18: 475-477]