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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: nerves nerves + nerves + repaired  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Spinal Cord Stem Cells May Act as Nerve Repair System
Washington Post, United States - Jul 22, 2008
They say it may be possible to develop drugs that boost the ability of these stem cells to repair damaged nerve cells. An adult's spinal cord contains only ...
Erythropoietin Accelerates Functional Recovery After Peripheral ...
Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery (subscription) - Aug 1, 2008
Histological analysis demonstrated enhanced erythropoietin-receptor positivity in the nerves that recovered fastest, suggesting that accelerated healing ...
Lehi firework accident victim has breathing tube reinserted
Daily Herald, UT -
On Monday, Karl said doctors told him that Bridger's femoral nerve, which was severed in the accident, could not be repaired. "The nerve is dead. ...
Foot Care for Diabetics
Diabetes Health (press release), CA -
This is because prolonged blood sugar elevation can injure and eventually destroy all sensory nerves in the feet (sensory neuropathy). ...
Mayo Clinic Experts Offer Insights on Olympians
MarketWatch -
Richard Berger, MD, Ph.D., is an expert on the biomechanics and nerves of the hand and wrist, from bones and ligaments to injury and repair. ...
An Historical Error
Voice of San Diego, CA -
Speaking about New York City he said "It's the most hectic, nerve-racking city. Imagine having to take the 7 train to the ballpark, looking like you're ...
A chance to fix the fight against Aids
guardian.co.uk, UK -
... be someone who has the nerve to resolutely stand up to political pressures - and to always put the needs and legitimate demands of the last first.
For Cordero, Non-Tender Talk Hits a Nerve
Washington Post, United States - Jul 24, 2008
On July 8, Cordero had surgery to repair a torn labrum. Recovery from such a procedure sometimes takes more than a season, but Cordero said Thursday that he ...
Brighter Smiles: Can teeth save lives?
Amesbury News, MA -
Neuronal which have the future potential to generate nerve and brain tissue. ? Adipocytes which have the future potential to generate fat tissue. ...
Simms Returns to Field, Works Through Nerves
The Ledger, FL - Jul 27, 2008
I was as nervous as I've been since my first day of training camp as a rookie; missing throws because of the nerves and things like that. ...
Source: Google News

Monkey median nerve repaired by nerve graft or collagen nerve guide tube. -
SJ Archibald, J Shefner, C Krarup, RD Madison - J Neurosci, 1995 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Click here to read Monkey median nerve repaired by nerve graft or collagen nerve
guide tube. Archibald SJ, Shefner J, Krarup C, Madison RD. ...

The cellular and molecular basis of peripheral nerve regeneration. -
SY Fu, T Gordon - Mol Neurobiol, 1997 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... new strategies that enhance the growth potential of neurons and optimize the growth
support of the distal nerve stump in combination with prompt nerve repair. ...

A collagen-based nerve guide conduit for peripheral nerve repair: An electrophysiological study of … -
SJ Archibald, C Krarup, J Shefner, ST Li, RD … - The Journal of Comparative Neurology, 1991 - doi.wiley.com
... of at least 15 mm. Key words: peripheral nervous system, nerve guide,
peripheral nerve graft, entubulation repair, collagen It has ...

Clinical Nerve Reconstruction with a Bioabsorbable Polyglycolic Acid Tube. -
SE Mackinnon, AL Dellon - Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, 1990 - plasreconsurg.com
... Walton et al.36 have published good results in 18 digital nerve defects repaired
with interpositional vein grafts. In the Walton et al. ...

[PDF] Functional reorganization in somatosensory cortical areas 3b and 1 of adult monkeys after median … -
JT Wall, JH Kaas, M Sur, RJ Nelson, DJ Felleman, … - Journal of Neuroscience, 1986 - mit.edu
... 1, Jan. 1986 Figure 3. Centers of all glabrous skin fields recorded in complete
maps of the area 3b hand representations of three monkeys with repaired nerves. ...

Peripheral Nerve Regeneration -
JW Faweett, RJ Keynes - Annual Reviews in Neuroscience, 1990 - Annual Reviews
... and cellular nerve grafts in repair of rat ... crush injuries on the connective tissues
of peripheral nerves. ... accllular autografts in the peripheral nervous system ...

Functional repair of motor endplates after botulinum neurotoxin type A poisoning: Biphasic switch of … -
A de Paiva, FA Meunier, J Molg?, KR Aoki, JO Dolly - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the …, 1999 - pubmedcentral.nih.gov
... of injury in the peripheral and central nervous systems. ... in plastic reactions after
both nerve injury and ... culminating in the complete functional repair of the ...

Muscle basal lamina: a new graft material for peripheral nerve repair. -
JW Fawcett, RJ Keynes - J Neurosurg, 1986 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
... Fawcett JW, Keynes RJ. The suitability of muscle basal lamina as a graft material
for the repair of peripheral nerves was investigated. ...

Syngeneic Schwann cells derived from adult nerves seeded in semipermeable guidance channels enhance … -
V Guenard, N Kleitman, TK Morrissey, RP Bunge, P … - Journal of Neuroscience, 1992 - neuroscience.org
... Myelinating Schwann Cells for the Injured and Dysmyelinated Nervous System J ... M. Cheney
A Tissue-Engineered Conduit for Peripheral Nerve Repair Arch Otolaryngol ...

Regeneration of the rat sciatic nerve into allografts made acellular through chemical extraction -
M Sondell, G Lundborg, M Kanje - Brain Research, 1998 - Elsevier
... Another problem is the shortage of autogenous nerves obtainable, should
large defects like plexus injuries needed to be repaired. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

Nerves controlling muscles are best repaired with similar nerves

When repairing severed or damaged motor nerves with a donor nerve graft, surgeons have traditionally used a sensory nerve from another area of the patient's body. However, these patients often do not fully regain function in the injured area.

But now a team of surgeons at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Barnes-Jewish Hospital has found that repairing a motor nerve in rats with an intact motor nerve yields better results than using a sensory nerve. The research appeared in the March issue of the journal Microsurgery.

Motor nerves control movement in the muscles, while sensory nerves receive sensory stimuli, such as pain. A significant difference between the two types of nerves is that motor nerves have much larger axons, the thread-like extensions of the nerve cell that carry nerve impulses throughout the body.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

The researchers, led by Gregory H. Borschel, M.D., a plastic and reconstructive surgeon at the School of Medicine and senior author of the paper, defines the question of this work as seeking to determine why motor nerves were regenerating more successfully than sensory nerves. Was it because of the nerve's own structure, or architecture, or because supporting cells such as Schwann cells were boosting the regeneration"

To find an answer, the researchers broke down the nerve architecture by chopping up motor, sensory and mixed nerves. They divided the minced nerves into groups by type, inserted the mush into tiny silicone tubes and encouraged severed motor nerves to regenerate through the mixtures in the tubes.

The researchers found that disrupting the nerve's architecture by mincing it abolished the benefit of repairing a motor nerve with an intact motor nerve. "It turned out there was no difference in regeneration using motor versus sensory nerves through the chopped-nerve tissue," Borschel said.

Several factors contributed to the results, he said. "We know that the axons, or nerve fibers, in the motor nerves are bigger, while the sensory nerve fibers are smaller," he said. "When the nerves are trying to regenerate using a motor nerve as a graft, it's easier for them to use the larger axons of another motor nerve, although the reason why is not clear."

The results could eventually translate into improved treatment for humans who have nerve damage from industrial, recreational or auto accidents.

"The research data is very compelling," Borschel said. "The evidence presented through this study could represent a paradigm shift from what we currently do in the operating room. The current standard of treatment for fixing a gap in a motor nerve is to use a sensory nerve, but we believe that if you use a motor nerve instead of a sensory nerve, then the outcome would be better."

The surgeons in the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery have begun using motor nerves grafts in limited patient cases with good results, Borschel said, but to clearly demonstrate the difference between motor nerve grafting and sensory nerve grafting in humans, much more study is needed.

One obstacle to the use of more motor nerve grafts is that the human body has a limited number of expendable motor nerves. Currently, surgeons are able to use the nerve from the gracilis muscle along the inner thigh or the latissimus dorsi along the side of the torso.

"This study, in conjunction with other related work from our laboratory, will likely result in a shift away from the use of traditional sensory nerve grafts to the much more permissive motor nerve grafts for reconstruction of injury," said Susan E. Mackinnon, M.D., the Sydney M., Jr. and Robert H. Shoenberg Professor and Head of the Division of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery at the School of Medicine.

###

Lloyd BM, Luginbuhl RD, Brenner MJ, Rocque BG, Tung TH, Myckatyn TM, Hunter DA, Mackinnon SE, Borschel GH. Use of motor nerve material in peripheral nerve repair with conduits. Microsurgery, Volume 27, Issue 2.

Funding from the National Institutes of Health supported this research.

Washington University School of Medicine's full-time and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient care institutions in the nation, currently ranked fourth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children's hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

 
 
 
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