Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Semi-invasive and Non-Invasive Recording of Visual Evoked Potentials in Mice

Documenta ophthalmologica(2019)

Cited 14|Views17
No score
Abstract
PurposeVisual evoked potentials (VEPs) are used to assess visual function in preclinical models of neurodegenerative diseases. VEP recording with epidural screw electrodes is a common method to study visual function in rodents, despite being an invasive procedure that can damage the tissue under the skull. The present study was performed to test a semi-invasive (epicranial) and a non-invasive (epidermal) VEP recording technique, comparing them with the classic epidural acquisition method.MethodsFlash VEPs were recorded from C57BL/6 mice on three separate days within 2weeks. Waveforms, latencies and amplitudes of the components were compared between the three different methods, utilizing coefficient of repeatability, coefficient of variation and intersession standard deviation to evaluate reproducibility.ResultsWhile epidural electrodes succeeded in recording two negative peaks (N1 and N2), epicranial and epidermal electrodes recorded a single peak (N1). Statistical indexes showed a comparable reproducibility between the three techniques, with a greater stability of N1 latency recorded through epicranial electrodes. Moreover, N1 amplitudes recorded with the new less-invasive methods were more reproducible compared to the invasive gold-standard technique.ConclusionsThese results demonstrate the reliability of semi- and non-invasive VEP recordings, which can be useful to evaluate murine models of neurological diseases.
More
Translated text
Key words
Animal welfare,Flash visual evoked potentials,Epidural electrode,Epicranial electrode,Epidermal electrode,Non-invasive electrophysiology
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined