## Abstract Preservation of peripheral nerves may, in the near future, play an important role in reconstructive surgery, especially if recent advances in immunosuppressive therapy are taken into account. Therefore, it has to be investigated whether peripheral nerves can be stored for some time afte
Tissue engineering of peripheral nerves: Epineurial grafts with application of cultured Schwann cells
β Scribed by H. Fansa; T. Dodic; G. Wolf; W. Schneider; G. Keilhoff
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 277 KB
- Volume
- 23
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0738-1085
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
After a simple nerve lesion, primary microsurgical suture is the treatment of choice. A nerve gap has to be bridged, with a nerve graft sacrificing a functioning nerve. Alternatively, tissue engineering of nerve grafts has become a subject of experimental research. It is evident that nerve regeneration requires not only an autologous, allogenous, or biodegradable scaffold, but additional interactions with regenerationβpromoting Schwann cells. In this study, we compared epineurial and acellularized epineurial tubes with and without application of cultured Schwann cells as alternative grafts in a rat sciatic nerve model. Autologous nerve grafts served as controls. Evaluation was performed after 6 weeks; afterwards, sections of the graft and distal nerve were harvested for histological and morphometrical analysis. Compared to controls, all groups showed a significantly lower number of axons, less wellβshaped remyelinizated axons, and a delay in clinical recovery (e.g., toe spread). The presented technique with application of Schwann cells into epineurial tubes did not offer any major advantages for nerve regeneration. Thus, in this applied model, neither the implantation of untreated nor the implantation of acellularized epineurial tubes with cultured Schwann cells to bridge nerve defects was capable of presenting a serious alternative to the present gold standard of conventional nerve grafts for bridging nerve defects in this model. Β© 2003 WileyβLiss, Inc. MICROSURGERY 23:72β77 2003
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