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Muscle differentiation after sciatic nerve transection and reinnervation in adult rats
Ist Teil von
Annals of anatomy, 2001-07, Vol.183 (4), p.369-377
Ort / Verlag
Germany: Elsevier GmbH
Erscheinungsjahr
2001
Quelle
MEDLINE
Beschreibungen/Notizen
Reinnervation after peripheral nerve transections generally leads to poor functional recovery. In order to study whether changes in muscles might be a contributing factor in this phenomenon we studied muscle morphology and fibre type distributions after sciatic nerve transection in the rat hind limb.
Proximally, before the bifurcation in the tibial and common peroneal nerve, a 12 mm segment of the sciatic nerve was resected, reversed and re-implanted as an autologous nerve graft. After survival periods of 7, 15 and 21 weeks the lateral gastrocnemius, tibialis anterior and soleus muscles were dissected, stained with mATP-ase, and fibre type distributions were studied. In addition, numbers of muscle fibres were counted, and cross sectional areas were calculated.
After 7 weeks, cross sectional areas were decreased in all muscles. In the gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior muscles the fibre number remained unaltered but the hypotrophy had been reversed at later ages. The number of muscle fibres in the soleus muscle remained decreased over the entire period of observation.
The percentages of type II fibres in the gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior muscles were decreased at 7 and 15 weeks but these again approached normal values at 21 weeks. The type I fibres, however, remained arranged in groups. In the soleus muscle a large increase in the percentage of type II muscle fibres was observed and this remained until 21 weeks.
We conclude that a non-selective reinnervation and later readjustments by regression of polyneural innervation may in part explain the changes in distributions of various fibre types.