Vascular accesses to measure hemodynamics, provide fluids and perform blood sampling are important to any small animal model study. We present a technique for implanting catheters into the carotid artery and the common jugular vein in an anesthetized rat for connecting to a system to perform monitoring, infusions and sampling.
The success of a small animal model to study critical illness is, in part, dependent on the ability of the model to simulate the human condition. Intra-tracheal inoculation of a known amount of bacteria has been successfully used to reproduce the pathogenesis of pneumonia which then develops into sepsis. Monitoring hemodynamic parameters and providing standard clinical treatment including infusion of antibiotics, fluids and drugs to maintain blood pressure is critical to simulate routine supportive care in this model but to do so requires both arterial and venous vascular access. The video details the surgical technique for implanting carotid artery and common jugular vein catheters in an anesthetized rat. Following a 72 hr recovery period, the animals will be re-anesthetized and connected to a tether and swivel setup attached to the rodent housing which connects the implanted catheters to the hemodynamic monitoring system. This setup allows free movement of the rat during the study while continuously monitoring pressures, infusing fluids and drugs (antibiotics, vasopressors) and performing blood sampling.
Arterial and venous catheterization of rats has long been used in laboratory research.1, 2 Catheterization can be used for monitoring of hemodynamic parameters including systolic, diastolic and mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR) and central venous pressure (CVP).3,4 In addition, these catheters allow the infusion of standard treatments or potential therapies as well as blood sampling to further analyze the underlying mechanism of an illness or treatment. Therefore, having vascular access in a small animal model is critical for studying clinical performance measures and treatment effects.
To study the underlying causes of critical illness, it is important to first develop a model to simulate the human condition. Intra-tracheal inoculation of a known amount of bacteria has been successfully used to reproduce the pathogenesis of pneumonia, a severe pulmonary infection which then develops into sepsis.3, 5 Monitoring hemodynamic measures and providing standard clinical treatment is critical to simulate routine supportive care. Standard clinical treatment includes infusion of antibiotics which aids in clearing the underlying infection and the administration of fluids and vasopressors, two therapies employed in septic patients to maintain blood pressure.5-7 Vascular access, specifically implantation of patent catheters is especially important when we study investigational therapies for sepsis.
For many years, the ability to administer standard clinical treatment to rodents was limited by the availability of the materials with the needed properties for constructing implantable catheters and the ability of the infusion technology to deliver small volumes accurately over time. In addition, the ability to trigger an infusion in response to the continuous monitoring of a specific hemodynamic measure allows for a consistent and reproducible standard treatment model when using larger sample sizes typical of rodent studies.8, 9 These technological limitations in materials and precision hardware have been overcome but to simultaneously provide routine therapies while monitoring hemodynamic parameters, both arterial and venous vascular access must be available.
The video details the surgical technique for implanting carotid artery and common jugular vein catheters in an anesthetized rat. Following a 72 hr recovery period, the animals will be re-anesthetized and connected to a tether and swivel setup attached to the rodent housing used to connect the implanted catheters to the hemodynamic monitoring system. During the study, the system allows for a fluid infusion based on either delivering a given volume at a certain infusion rate or an automated system that delivers an infusion rate depending on the mean arterial pressure detected to maintain a given pressure range. The fluid infusion system uses programmable syringe pumps that interface with the data acquisition system’s digital outputs and are controlled by the software monitoring the MAP. The tether and swivel setup allows free movement of the rat during the study while monitoring pressures, infusing fluids and vasopressors, and performing blood sampling without having to manipulate the animals. Simultaneous monitoring of up to 12 instrumented animals with 2 catheters each (in our setup) with the hardware expandable to monitoring 24 instrumented animals allows for a great deal of flexibility for studying multiple stratified groups in each experiment.
This catheterization procedure can be beneficial to research facilities that use similar rodent models requiring vascular access for monitoring, sampling and treatment for up to 11 days. If the research facility considering this procedure has experience with rodents and a proper support structure for maintaining these animals then developing these skills can provide a significant cost saving, reducing total cost per catheterized rat from more than $180 to less than $50 (including naïve rat, catheter components and technical costs) and increasing scheduling flexibility (naïve rats are readily available vs. company delivery schedule of implanted rats). The success of this procedure is dependent on the skills of the individual performing the catheterizations. The training animals required to become proficient in this procedure has ranged from 20 to 40 rats with a resulting catheter patency rate of >90%.
The procedures described below were performed as part of a protocol approved by the Animal Care and Use Committee of the Clinical Center at the National Institutes of Health.
1. Preparation for Surgery
2. Prepare the Catheters
3. Prepare Aseptic Workstation
4. Prepare Rats for Surgery
5. Catheter Implantation
6. Right Jugular Vein Catheterization
7. Left Carotid Artery Catheterization
8. Using a Straight Hemostat, Tunnel a 5 cm Tube back Subcutaneously behind the Ear and through the Incision between the Scapulae. Exteriorize the Catheters through the Tube and Remove the Tube.
9. Close the Ventral Incision with Three Stainless Steel Wound Clips, and the Dorsal Incision with 4-0 Silk Sutures to Secure the Exteriorized Catheters in Place.
10. Post-surgical Monitor and Care
11. Connection to Hemodynamic System
12. Blood Sampling, Pressure Monitoring and Drug Administration
Changes in vascular pressure are transmitted through the fluid filled catheters (Figure 1) and converted into electrical signals represented by the hemodynamic waveforms (Figures 2, 3). Without vascular access, these measures could not be made. Real-time streaming of the waveforms allows for detection and analysis of changes on a beat to beat basis (Figure 2). Compressing the time scale of the waveforms allows for quantifying changes that occur over a longer duration (minutes to days) (Figure 3, upper 4 waveforms) which can be correlated with changes in vasopressor infusion rates (Figure 3, lower 4 waveforms).
Figure 1. Catheter Design: Details of the components of the arterial and venous catheters. PU, polyurethane; PE, polyethylene (segment length) Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2. Real-time MAP waveforms of 4 typical rodents 7 days post-catheterization over 7 sec. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3. Time-compressed MAP waveforms of 4 typical rodents (upper 4 waveforms) 7 days post-catheterization over 1 hr. When the MAP is averaged (lower 4 waveforms), that value is used to trigger ADDS high (< 90 mmHg), low (<100 mmHg) or stop (>110) flow response from the infusion pump. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Investigating therapeutic approaches to a clinical model of illness necessitates the ability to accurately perform hemodynamic monitoring, thus requiring vascular access. In our model of sepsis, arterial catheterization provides systemic pressure monitoring and venous catheterization allows for the application of standard clinical therapy. Standard therapy for sepsis includes the infusion of antibiotics to treat bacterial infection and the infusion of fluids and vasopressors to maintain arterial pressure within the desired range. Both catheters are used for blood sampling. In this design, the application of programmable infusion pumps with automatic triggering of the vasopressor infusion rate based on real-time mean arterial pressures is an advance over the clinical setting which requires manual titration by the medical staff and in the pre-clinical setting makes the use of this treatment modality possible for studying large numbers of animals.
Some complications were experienced early in the development of the model. These included partial occlusion of both arterial and venous catheters from over tightening, ties on PU2 and PU3 components, (1-2%); misplacement of jugular venous catheter into a small branch, (<1%); unexplained sudden death after recovery (no pulmonary thrombus or other organ damage evident), (1-2%) resolved by keeping isoflurane concentration 2-3.5% with O2 flow rate of 2 L/min. Other common surgical complications of hemorrhage, local infection and self-inflicted damage were not observed. Once surgical proficiency is attained, each procedure should be able to be completed in no more than 15 min. The rate of success measured as a healthy recovery and patent catheters, can be expected to exceed 90% once fully trained. An additional animal is included in each study to minimize the loss of data and the total number of animals needed and account for a failed catheter that may be “infusion only” or mortality due to complications.
The most critical step in this procedure is the design and placement of the catheters. The materials need to be soft at the tip so as not to pierce the vessel wall without crimping too easily. The body of the catheter has to be stiffer (than the tip) to be able to advance into the vessel sufficiently and be secured in place. Figure 1 shows the 3 diameters of tubing that are connected for the arterial catheter and 2 different diameter tubing connected for the venous catheters. These components are slid within each other to reduce catheter diameter at the tip and are glued together with anchors added to ensure placement of the catheter in the vessel or heart is maintained.
Once recovered and connected to the swivel and tether, the MAP and CVP waveforms should appear similar to the data represented in Figure 2. To maintain arterial catheter patency during monitoring, an hourly heparin saline flush (0.05 ml) should be performed. Continuous infusion maintains the venous catheter patency. During line connection and flush, close attention must be paid to insure there are no air bubbles in the line. An air bubble of ≥0.1ml can result in an embolism in the lung, brain or other organs. Hemodynamic waveforms are recorded and analyzed over the course of the study. When compressing time in the x axis, Figure 3 shows the changes in MAP and CVP over the course of 1 hr as well as the changes in rate and effect of vasopressor infusion.
The procedure has several potential limitations. In our studies, the catheters remain patent for up to 11 days. It is unknown how long the catheters would remain patent beyond this period. To fit the catheters as described, there is a minimum vascular size, which roughly correlates with rodent weight, requiring animals enrolled in this study to be greater than 200 g. The use of a smaller catheter diameter would result in increasing resistances to flow reducing patency. Attaining central venous pressure measures requires precise catheter placement in the atrium sufficient to account for size and growth during the study period and can be a challenge.
Once mastered, arterial and vascular catheterization can provide the basis for a wide variety of rodent models requiring hemodynamic monitoring, blood sampling, and infusion of fluids or therapies while minimizing any pain and distress during instrumentation or handling once recovered. In fact, in conjunction with a previous JOVE publication10 describing catheterization of the femoral vein, we have successfully performed this model with 3 implanted catheters.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
Intramural NIH program supported the development of this model. Publication support was provided by Harvard Apparatus Inc. and ADInstruments Inc. The work by the authors was done as part of US government–funded research; however, the opinions expressed are not necessarily those of the National Institutes of Health.
Name of Material/ Equipment | Company | Catalog Number | Comments/Description |
straight micro dissecting forceps | Roboz | RS-8102 | surgical instrument |
delicate straight hemostatic forceps | Roboz | RS-7114 | surgical instrument |
delicate curved hemostatic forceps | Miltex | 7-4 | surgical instrument |
serrefine curved, very delicate micro clamp | Roboz | RS-5471 | surgical instrument |
micro dissecting hook | Miltex | 19-220 | surgical instrument |
angled on edge micro dissecting spring scissor | Roboz | RS-5618 | surgical instrument |
light operating scissor | Roboz | RS-6750 | surgical instrument |
scalpel handle and blade (#10) | Cincinnati Surgical | RS-9843 | surgical instrument |
pack of 4-0 silk suture with curved needle | Ethicon | FS-2 | surgical instrument |
straight micro suturing needle holder | Roboz | RS-6410 | surgical instrument |
wound clip | Stoelting | 59027 | surgical instrument |
sterile gauze 2"x2" | Dynarex | 3362 | consumable |
gauze 4"x4" | Covidien | 2556 | consumable |
Anesthesia vaporizer | Surgivet | V703001 | equipment |
lucite box | Custom | equipment | |
isoflurane | Baxter | equipment | |
downdraft Table | Airscience | equipment | |
table top surgical platform | Custom | equipment | |
arterial Catheter | Custom | consumable | |
venous Catheter | Custom | consumable | |
Data Acquisition System | ADInstruments | Powerlab 16/30 | equipment |
Data Analysis software | ADInstruments | LabChart v7.3 | equipment |
Programmable infusion pumps | Harvard Apparatus | PHD Ultra | equipment |