Abstract

The minimum number of regenerating facial nerve myelinated motor axons that are required to innervate and activate the mimetic musculature is not known. We compare rabbit facial nerve regeneration following complete transectional injuries of the buccal division to the evoked and behavioral muscle activities of the quadratus labii superioris muscle of the rabbit in three experimental models: end-to-end direct anastomosis (N = 4), 8-mm autologous nerve grafts (N = 8), and 10-mm silicone chamber implants (N = 40). Data are presented as total numbers of regenerating myelinated axons that traverse the surgical repair and innervate the fascicles of the transected distal nerve stump, as well as the percentage of regenerating neurites, as compared to the preoperative normal controls. Five weeks after neural repair, direct end-to-end anastomosis regained more myelinated axons across the reconstructed defect (2,632 +/- 1,232; 67%) than silicone tube implants (2,006 +/- 445; 51%) or autologous cable graft repairs (1,660 +/- 1,169; 42%). However, only a small percentage of myelinated fibers innervated the intrafascicular region of the distal transected neural stump in direct anastomosis (948 +/- 168; 24%), silicone tube implants (670 +/- 275; 17%), or autologous nerve grafts (445 +/- 120; 12%) in rabbits that regained evoked and behavioral mimetic muscle activity. All rabbits with direct anastomosis and neural cable grafts regained motor activity, despite the fact that 66% of regenerating motor neurites in cable graft repairs and 54% in direct anastomosis were collateral sprouts that did not contribute to effective muscle activity. In 17 rabbits with neural regenerates within the silicone tube implants that did not regain mimetic activity, the mean number of regenerating myelinated motor axons across the defect was 504 +/- 419 (13%), and the mean number of axons that innervated the distal transected nerve stump fascicles was 277 +/- 128 (7%). Therefore, the minimal number of motor axons that is required to activate the quadratus labii superioris muscle is 12% of the original motor axon population of the normal buccal nerve division.

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