Abstract

Neonatal peripheral nerve injury results in a significant rearrangement of the central terminals of surviving axotomized and adjacent intact primary afferents in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. This study investigates the ability of these afferents to make functional contacts with dorsal horn cells, using c- fos expression as a marker of synaptic activation. Graded electrical stimulation at A- or C-fiber strength of either the neonatally axotomized sciatic nerve or the adjacent uninjured saphenous nerve was performed in adult rats. Stimulation of the contralateral uninjured nerve served as a control. Quantitative examination of the number and distribution of c- fos-labeled cells in the spinal cord laminae was performed. Electrical stimulation of the previously axotomized sciatic nerve at A-fiber intensity resulted in many labeled profiles in laminae I–V of the lumbar spinal cord on the experimental as compared to the contralateral side. Electrical stimulation of uninjured saphenous nerve or saphenous-nerve-innervated skin (using pin electrodes) at A-fiber intensity did not evoke c- fos. Stimulation of the saphenous nerve at C-fiber intensity, however, resulted in a significant increase in the number and distribution of c- fos-labeled profiles in laminae I–V on the experimental side as compared to the contralateral control side. The results show that the distribution of c- fos-expressing cells after neonatal nerve injury is compatible with the previously demonstrated distribution of sprouting of primary afferents belonging to an uninjured nerve adjacent to an injured nerve, and that the surviving axotomized afferents are capable of transmitting signals to postsynaptic cells. These findings indicate that Aβ afferent stimulation of injured but not uninjured afferents elicits c- fos expression in postsynaptic cells. This may reflect an injury-induced maintenance of a normal developmental process whereby Aβ stimulation elicits c- fos in dorsal horn neurons.

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