| Literature DB >> 35630331 |
Michael Adler1, Sabine Pellett2, Shashi K Sharma3, Frank J Lebeda4, Zygmunt F Dembek5, Mark A Mahan6.
Abstract
Traumatic peripheral nerve injuries tend to be more common in younger, working age populations and can lead to long-lasting disability. Peripheral nerves have an impressive capacity to regenerate; however, successful recovery after injury depends on a number of factors including the mechanism and severity of the trauma, the distance from injury to the reinnervation target, connective tissue sheath integrity, and delay between injury and treatment. Even though modern surgical procedures have greatly improved the success rate, many peripheral nerve injuries still culminate in persistent neuropathic pain and incomplete functional recovery. Recent studies in animals suggest that botulinum neurotoxin A (BoNT/A) can accelerate nerve regeneration and improve functional recovery after injury to peripheral nerves. Possible mechanisms of BoNT/A action include activation or proliferation of support cells (Schwann cells, mast cells, and macrophages), increased angiogenesis, and improvement of blood flow to regenerating nerves.Entities:
Keywords: BoNT/A; PNI; Schwann cells; angiogenesis; botulinum neurotoxin A; chronic constriction injury; conditioning lesion; crush injury; nerve regeneration; peripheral nerve injury; reinnervation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35630331 PMCID: PMC9148055 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10050886
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Regenerative Actions of BoNT/A in Rodent Models.
| Ref. | Nerve Injury | Species | Formulation & Dose | Route | Major Assessments | Primary Finding | Proposed Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | CCI 1 | Mouse | 150 kDa BoNT/A; 15 pg/paw | Intraplantar | Weight bearing; walking track analysis | Normalization of weight bearing; accelerated recovery of SSI 2 | Proliferation of repair Schwann cells |
| [ | Nerve crush | Mouse | 150 kDa BoNT/A; 15 pg in 2 µL saline | Intraneural injection at crush site | Pinch test; CMAP 3; CNAP 4; nerve fiber number and density | Increased rate of regeneration of myelinated nerves | Proliferation of repair Schwann cells; reduced inflammation |
| CCI 1 | Mouse | 15 pg in 20 µL saline | Intraplantar injection | ||||
| [ | Transection/repair of femoral nerve | Rat | IncobotulinumtoxinA (Xeomin®); 100 U/mL 5 for 30 min | Incubation of proximal nerve stump | Walking track analysis; histochemical | Marked acceleration in recovery of 6 FBA × SLR index | Preservation of cholinergic input to femoral motor neurons |
| [ | Transection of tibial nerve with and without repair | Rat | AbobotulinumtoxinA (Dysport®); 16 U/kg | Intramuscular injection in contralateral gastrocnemius muscle | Walking track analysis; EMG; axonal density | Accelerated recovery of walking track performance in rats undergoing nerve transection with immediate repair | Adaptation by CNS in response to muscle weakness in contralateral limb |
1 CCI = chronic constriction injury; 2 SSI = sciatic static index; 3 CMAP = compound muscle action potential; 4 CNAP = compound nerve action potential; 5 U = mouse intraperitoneal lethal dose50 (LD50) units; 6 FBA × SLR = foot-base angle × step length ratio.