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Short-duration hypothermia induction in rats using models for studies examining clinical relevance and mechanisms

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posted on 2025-05-11, 18:00 authored by Daniel Omileke, Steven BothwellSteven Bothwell, Daniel BeardDaniel Beard, Nikolce MacKovski, Sara Azarpeykan, Kirsten CouplandKirsten Coupland, Adjanie Patabendige, Neil SprattNeil Spratt
Therapeutic hypothermia (TH) is a powerful neuroprotective strategy that has provided robust evidence for neuroprotection in pre-clinical studies of neurological disorders. Despite strong pre-clinical evidence, TH has not shown efficacy in clinical trials of most neurological disorders. The only successful trials employing therapeutic hypothermia were related to cardiac arrest in adults and hypoxic ischemic injury in neonates. Further investigations into the parameters of its use, and study design comparisons between pre-clinical and clinical studies, are warranted. This article demonstrates two methods of short-duration hypothermia induction. The first method allows for rapid hypothermia induction in rats using ethanol spray and fans. This method works by cooling the skin, which has been less commonly used in clinical trials and may have different physiological effects. Cooling is much more rapid with this technique than is achievable in human patients due to differences in surface area to volume ratio. Along with this, a second method is also presented, which allows for a clinically achievable cooling rate for short-duration hypothermia. This method is easy to implement, reproducible and does not require active skin cooling.

Funding

NHMRC

History

Journal title

Journal of Visualized Experiments

Volume

169

Issue

March 2021

Article number

e62325

Publisher

Journal of Visualized Experiments

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing

School

School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy

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