A quantitative electron microscope analysis of peripheral nerve in the urodele amphibian in relation to limb regenerative capacity
โ Scribed by Margaret Egar; Marcus Singer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1971
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 877 KB
- Volume
- 133
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0362-2525
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
An approximate 1:1 ratio of myelinated to unmyelinated fibers was established in counts from electron micrograph montages in nerves of the newt, Triturus (Notophthalmus) viridescens. The number of myelinated fibers correspond to the number counted with the light microscope after osmium fixation. Light microscope counts of silver impregnated sections yielded a value slightly higher suggesting that, except for bundles of unmyelinated fibers, the silver technique revealed mainly myelinated fibers. The results were used to reassess previous quantitative studies on the relation between number of nerve fibers and the control which nerves exert on regeneration. For a truer estimate of the number of axons affecting regeneration, fiber values previously reported should now be doubled to include the large number of unmyelinated fibers. However, calculations show that the unmyelinated fibers contribute less than 3% of the total neuroplasm in the peripheral nerve.
Finally, counts made of Schwann cells and fibroblasts show that the latter are few in number.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The nerve fibers present at the amputation surface of the upper arm of the land stage and larval newt were counted and compared with values previously published by one of us on the adult. When expressed per unit area of surface, it was observed that the limb of the larva and the small land forms is