Publication | Open Access
Spontaneous Hemorrhagic Stroke in a Mouse Model of Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy
282
Citations
53
References
2001
Year
App23 MiceCerebral Amyloid AngiopathyCerebrovascular DiseaseCerebral Vascular RegulationNeuroinflammationNeurovascular DiseaseThrombosisAlzheimer's DiseaseStrokeFatal Lobar HemorrhageBrain InjuryNeurologyBrain PathologySpontaneous Hemorrhagic StrokeNeuropathologyMouse ModelVascular BiologyCerebral Blood FlowIschemic StrokeVascular Cognitive DisorderFirst Mouse ModelHemostasisNeuroscienceMedicine
A high risk factor for spontaneous and often fatal lobar hemorrhage is cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). We now report that CAA in an amyloid precursor protein transgenic mouse model (APP23 mice) leads to a loss of vascular smooth muscle cells, aneurysmal vasodilatation, and in rare cases, vessel obliteration and severe vasculitis. This weakening of the vessel wall is followed by rupture and bleedings that range from multiple, recurrent microhemorrhages to large hematomas. Our results demonstrate that, in APP transgenic mice, the extracellular deposition of neuron-derived beta-amyloid in the vessel wall is the cause of vessel wall disruption, which eventually leads to parenchymal hemorrhage. This first mouse model of CAA-associated hemorrhagic stroke will now allow development of diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.
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