Gamma Knife Radiosurgery Targeting Protocols for the Experiments with Small Animals

Publisher: Karger

E-ISSN: 1423-0372|85|4|135-143

ISSN: 1011-6125

Source: Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery, Vol.85, Iss.4, 2007-01, pp. : 135-143

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Abstract

Background/Aims: Manipulation of brain functions via Gamma Knife (GK) irradiation would have numerous applications in clinical and experimental neurology. Methods: Alteration of brain functions in the unilaterally irradiated striatum was indexed through monitoring freely moving rat behaviors. Spontaneous activity and rotations on the apomorphine test, which can detect dopaminergic function imbalance, were indexed employing our behavior tracking system. The spatial distribution of necrotic lesions was explored using serial sections, and was assumed to represent the real foci of the GK target. Results: Distinct behavioral alterations corresponded to the precise locations of the lesions in various areas of the basal ganglia. Displacement of the irradiation sites in the anteromedial direction increased spontaneous activity, and posterolateral shift provoked circling behavior on the apomorphine test. Conclusion: Accurate positioning of the target is crucial for experimental GK irradiation locally focused on domains of a small brain such as that of the rat. Here, we propose a protocol for converting the ‘intended’ focus, based on brain map coordinates, to a ‘planned’ focus on the MR imaging coordinate system with the Régis-Valliccioni stereotactic frame.