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Zheng Gang Zhang, Li Zhang, Quan Jiang, Ruilan Zhang, Kenneth Davies, Cecylia Powers, Nicholas van Bruggen, Michael Chopp
Published in Volume 106, Issue 7
J Clin Invest. 2000; 106(7):829–838 doi:10.1172/JCI9369
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Figure 1

Composite images (through stacks of 14 optical sections of 5-μm thickness) of cerebral microvascular plasma perfusion obtained from the ischemic penumbra of the cortex 9 days after MCA occlusion. Late treatment with rhVEGF165 enhances cerebral microvascular plasma perfusion in the penumbra (b) compared with the control rat (a). Treatment with rhVEGF165 did not alter cerebral microvascular plasma perfusion in the contralateral hemisphere (d), compared with the contralateral hemisphere in the control rat (c). Bar, 100 μm. Quantitative data analyzed by the MIRAGE program (g) show a significant increase of plasma perfusion in vessels within 3 μm of diameters in the rhVEGF165–treated group (filled bars; n = 5) compared with the saline-treated group (open bars; n = 6; AP < 0.05). Higher-magnification images show that cerebral microvessels in the ipsilateral hemisphere had an irregular pattern of tortuosity (e) compared with the vessels in the contralateral hemisphere (f). Dimension of the composite image is 260.6 × 260.6 × 20 μm3. (h) The percentage of vessels with different diameters in the entire vessels perfused by FITC-dextran. The number of vessels with diameters within 2 μm is significantly (P < 0.01) higher in the ipsilateral hemisphere (filled squares; n = 5) than in the contralateral hemisphere (open squares; n = 5).