Ultrasonographic and histological evaluation of the effects of long-term carotid catheterization on cardiac function in NMRI mice

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Standard

Ultrasonographic and histological evaluation of the effects of long-term carotid catheterization on cardiac function in NMRI mice. / Teilmann, Anne C; Thomsen, Morten B; Ihms, Elizabeth A; Pate, Nathan; Hau, Jann; Abelson, Klas.

I: Laboratory Animals, Bind 52, Nr. 1, 02.2018, s. 17-28.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Teilmann, AC, Thomsen, MB, Ihms, EA, Pate, N, Hau, J & Abelson, K 2018, 'Ultrasonographic and histological evaluation of the effects of long-term carotid catheterization on cardiac function in NMRI mice', Laboratory Animals, bind 52, nr. 1, s. 17-28. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677217706724

APA

Teilmann, A. C., Thomsen, M. B., Ihms, E. A., Pate, N., Hau, J., & Abelson, K. (2018). Ultrasonographic and histological evaluation of the effects of long-term carotid catheterization on cardiac function in NMRI mice. Laboratory Animals, 52(1), 17-28. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677217706724

Vancouver

Teilmann AC, Thomsen MB, Ihms EA, Pate N, Hau J, Abelson K. Ultrasonographic and histological evaluation of the effects of long-term carotid catheterization on cardiac function in NMRI mice. Laboratory Animals. 2018 feb.;52(1):17-28. https://doi.org/10.1177/0023677217706724

Author

Teilmann, Anne C ; Thomsen, Morten B ; Ihms, Elizabeth A ; Pate, Nathan ; Hau, Jann ; Abelson, Klas. / Ultrasonographic and histological evaluation of the effects of long-term carotid catheterization on cardiac function in NMRI mice. I: Laboratory Animals. 2018 ; Bind 52, Nr. 1. s. 17-28.

Bibtex

@article{34c8945826cb4e7885c9c84a14f3c48c,
title = "Ultrasonographic and histological evaluation of the effects of long-term carotid catheterization on cardiac function in NMRI mice",
abstract = "Catheterization of laboratory mice is commonly performed in biomedical research to infuse substances and for blood sampling. One approach is to catheterize the right common carotid artery and advance the catheter until the tip is positioned in the aorta or the proximal brachiocephalic trunk. Owing to the small body size of the mouse, a catheter tends to occupy a great part of even the larger vessel lumens, and this may increase vascular resistance with potential pathophysiological impacts on the heart. The present study compared cardiac function of catheterized mice, with catheter tip placement in the brachiocephalic trunk, with sham-operated mice and non-operated control mice. During four weeks post-catheterization, M-mode echocardiography measurements of the thickness of the left ventricular anterior wall, left ventricular inner diameter and the thickness of the left ventricular posterior wall were performed. The left ventricular volume, ejection fraction and fractional shortening were calculated. Moreover, aortic recordings of the thickness of the medial and lateral walls as well as the inner diameter were measured. Terminally, histological analysis of the hearts was conducted, and body weights and heart weights were compared between groups. No effects on echocardiography parameters, histology, body weights or cardiac weights could be found between groups. In the present study, implantation of a carotid catheter with catheter tip placement in the proximal brachiocephalic trunk had minimal influence on cardiac and aortic physiology and did not induce significant cardiac changes.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Teilmann, {Anne C} and Thomsen, {Morten B} and Ihms, {Elizabeth A} and Nathan Pate and Jann Hau and Klas Abelson",
year = "2018",
month = feb,
doi = "10.1177/0023677217706724",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "17--28",
journal = "Laboratory Animals",
issn = "0023-6772",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ultrasonographic and histological evaluation of the effects of long-term carotid catheterization on cardiac function in NMRI mice

AU - Teilmann, Anne C

AU - Thomsen, Morten B

AU - Ihms, Elizabeth A

AU - Pate, Nathan

AU - Hau, Jann

AU - Abelson, Klas

PY - 2018/2

Y1 - 2018/2

N2 - Catheterization of laboratory mice is commonly performed in biomedical research to infuse substances and for blood sampling. One approach is to catheterize the right common carotid artery and advance the catheter until the tip is positioned in the aorta or the proximal brachiocephalic trunk. Owing to the small body size of the mouse, a catheter tends to occupy a great part of even the larger vessel lumens, and this may increase vascular resistance with potential pathophysiological impacts on the heart. The present study compared cardiac function of catheterized mice, with catheter tip placement in the brachiocephalic trunk, with sham-operated mice and non-operated control mice. During four weeks post-catheterization, M-mode echocardiography measurements of the thickness of the left ventricular anterior wall, left ventricular inner diameter and the thickness of the left ventricular posterior wall were performed. The left ventricular volume, ejection fraction and fractional shortening were calculated. Moreover, aortic recordings of the thickness of the medial and lateral walls as well as the inner diameter were measured. Terminally, histological analysis of the hearts was conducted, and body weights and heart weights were compared between groups. No effects on echocardiography parameters, histology, body weights or cardiac weights could be found between groups. In the present study, implantation of a carotid catheter with catheter tip placement in the proximal brachiocephalic trunk had minimal influence on cardiac and aortic physiology and did not induce significant cardiac changes.

AB - Catheterization of laboratory mice is commonly performed in biomedical research to infuse substances and for blood sampling. One approach is to catheterize the right common carotid artery and advance the catheter until the tip is positioned in the aorta or the proximal brachiocephalic trunk. Owing to the small body size of the mouse, a catheter tends to occupy a great part of even the larger vessel lumens, and this may increase vascular resistance with potential pathophysiological impacts on the heart. The present study compared cardiac function of catheterized mice, with catheter tip placement in the brachiocephalic trunk, with sham-operated mice and non-operated control mice. During four weeks post-catheterization, M-mode echocardiography measurements of the thickness of the left ventricular anterior wall, left ventricular inner diameter and the thickness of the left ventricular posterior wall were performed. The left ventricular volume, ejection fraction and fractional shortening were calculated. Moreover, aortic recordings of the thickness of the medial and lateral walls as well as the inner diameter were measured. Terminally, histological analysis of the hearts was conducted, and body weights and heart weights were compared between groups. No effects on echocardiography parameters, histology, body weights or cardiac weights could be found between groups. In the present study, implantation of a carotid catheter with catheter tip placement in the proximal brachiocephalic trunk had minimal influence on cardiac and aortic physiology and did not induce significant cardiac changes.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1177/0023677217706724

DO - 10.1177/0023677217706724

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28530480

VL - 52

SP - 17

EP - 28

JO - Laboratory Animals

JF - Laboratory Animals

SN - 0023-6772

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 178701089