2014-10-09T10:32:43Z
2014-10-09T10:32:43Z
2006-06-14
2014-10-09T10:32:44Z
Peripheral nerve injury is typically associated with long-term disturbances in sensory localization, despite nerve repair and regeneration. Here, we investigate the extent of correct reinnervation by back-labeling neuronal soma with fluorescent tracers applied in the target area before and after sciatic nerve injury and repair in the rat. The subpopulations of sensory or motor neurons that had regenerated their axons to either the tibial branch or the skin of the third hindlimb digit were calculated from the number of cell bodies labeled by the first and/or second tracer. Compared to the normal control side, 81% of the sensory and 66% of the motor tibial nerve cells regenerated their axons back to this nerve, while 22% of the afferent cells from the third digit reinnervated this digit. Corresponding percentages based on quantification of the surviving population on the experimental side showed 91%, 87%, and 56%, respectively. The results show that nerve injury followed by nerve repair by epineurial suture results in a high but variable amount of topographically correct regeneration, and that proportionally more neurons regenerate into the correct proximal nerve branch than into the correct innervation territory in the skin
Article
Accepted version
English
Nervis perifèrics; Pell; Neurones motores; Regeneració del sistema nerviós; Rates (Animals de laboratori); Peripheral nerves; Skin; Motor neurons; Nervous system regeneration; Rats as laboratory animals
Elsevier B.V.
Versió postprint del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2006.04.077
Brain Research, 2006, vol. 1098 , num. 1, p. 49 -60
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2006.04.077
(c) Elsevier B.V., 2006