## Abstract The regeneration of motor and sensory neurons and the morphological changes of the target muscle after phrenic nerve transfer were investigated in adult rats. Six months following nerve transfer, 326.0 ยฑ 16.31 phrenic motoneurons regenerated into musculocutaneous nerve, which is not dif
The rat brachial plexus and its terminal branches: An experimental model for the study of peripheral nerve regeneration
โ Scribed by Dr. Jayme Augusto Bertelli; Madgid Taleb; Assia Saadi; Jean-Claude Mira; Monique Pecot-Dechavassine
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 961 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0738-1085
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Despite the introduction of microsurgical techniques into clinical practice, the results of surgical procedures involving the brachial plexus and peripheral nerves are still far from spectacular. We therefore studied the rat brachial plexus and its terminal branches in 203 rats. Detailed anatomic and morphologic analyses of the biceps brachii and musculocutaneous nerve, finger flexors, flexor carpi radialis, and the median nerve were performed. Various sources of conventional and vascularized nerve grafts were explored. After musculocutaneous nerve section or median nerve section, there were no articular contractures or automutilations, which constitutes an advantage for these experimental models over the sciatic nerve model. The brachial plexus and its terminal branches provide a good experimental model which can be used to assess the development and normal control of muscle function, examine the mechanisms underlying functional recovery, and test the effects of treatments to enhance recovery.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Rejection and regeneration processes in peripheral nerve allografts are analyzed in this review of a series of experiments with special reference to the possible clinical application of peripheral nerve allografting in clinical reconstructive surgery. A long segment of the sciatic nerve