Acute and chronic effects of unilateral cerebral infarction on the EEG and behavior of the rat

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Abstract

Anoxic ischemia with resultant unilateral cerebral infarction was produced in the rat by unilateral ligation of the external and common carotid arteries and exposure of the animal to nitrogen. EEG and behavior were studied for one month after the anoxic insult. Infarcted animals showed prominent circling, contralateral flexion postures, and absent visual and tactile placing. At the end of one month the only persistent clinical abnormality was absent contralateral tactile placing. Acutely the EEG showed loss of normal background activity and high voltage slow waves over the infarcted hemisphere. EEG improvement paralleled clinical improvement. At the end of one month only minor asymmetries were observed in the EEG but sleep spindles remained absent on the infarcted side. © 1974 American Heart Association, Inc.

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Wiederholt, W. C., & Pariser, S. F. (1974). Acute and chronic effects of unilateral cerebral infarction on the EEG and behavior of the rat. Stroke, 5(1), 85–91. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.STR.5.1.85

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