| Literature DB >> 29659046 |
Michelle Mikesh1, Cameron L Ghergherehchi2, Sina Rahesh1, Karthik Jagannath1, Amir Ali1, Dale R Sengelaub3, Richard C Trevino4, David M Jackson5, Haley O Tucker2, George D Bittner1.
Abstract
Many publications report that ablations of segments of peripheral nerves produce the following unfortunate results: (1) Immediate loss of sensory signaling and motor control; (2) rapid Wallerian degeneration of severed distal axons within days; (3) muscle atrophy within weeks; (4) poor behavioral (functional) recovery after many months, if ever, by slowly-regenerating (∼1mm/d) axon outgrowths from surviving proximal nerve stumps; and (5) Nerve allografts to repair gap injuries are rejected, often even if tissue matched and immunosuppressed. In contrast, using a female rat sciatic nerve model system, we report that neurorrhaphy of allografts plus a well-specified-sequence of solutions (one containing polyethylene glycol: PEG) successfully addresses each of these problems by: (a) Reestablishing axonal continuity/signaling within minutes by nonspecific ally PEG-fusing (connecting) severed motor and sensory axons across each anastomosis; (b) preventing Wallerian degeneration by maintaining many distal segments of inappropriately-reconnected, PEG-fused axons that continuously activate nerve-muscle junctions; (c) maintaining innervation of muscle fibers that undergo much less atrophy than otherwise-denervated muscle fibers; (d) inducing remarkable behavioral recovery to near-unoperated levels within days to weeks, almost certainly by CNS and PNS plasticities well-beyond what most neuroscientists currently imagine; and (e) preventing rejection of PEG-fused donor nerve allografts with no tissue matching or immunosuppression. Similar behavioral results are produced by PEG-fused autografts. All results for Negative Control allografts agree with current neuroscience data 1-5 given above. Hence, PEG-fusion of allografts for repair of ablated peripheral nerve segments expand on previous observations in single-cut injuries, provoke reconsideration of some current neuroscience dogma, and further extend the potential of PEG-fusion in clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: Wallerian degeneration; axotomy; nerve regeneration; nerve repair; polyethylene glycol; sciatic nerve
Year: 2018 PMID: 29659046 PMCID: PMC5980695 DOI: 10.1002/jnr.24227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosci Res ISSN: 0360-4012 Impact factor: 4.164