Abstract

Nerve fibers displaying calcitonin gene related peptide (CGRP) immunoreactivity occurred in dental pulps of several mammals, including man. The CGRP fibers were more numerous in the apical parts than in the coronal parts and were distributed around small blood vessels as well as in the pulpal stroma without any obvious relation to blood vessels. The trigeminal, spinal and jugular-nodose ganglia harbored a moderate supply of CGRP immunoreactive perikarya and nerve fibers. Immunocytochemic double staining revealed the coexistence of CGRP and SP in a population of perikarya in the sensory ganglia and suggested coexistence of the two peptides in perivascular nerve fibers in the cat dental pulp. The cervical sympathetic ganglia did not contain CGRP-immunoreactive perikarya. Cervical sympathectomy (studied in the guinea-pig and rat) did not affect the frequency or distribution of pulpal CGRP fibers. The distribution of CGRP fibers within the dental pulp and the presence of CGRP perikarya in sensory ganglia known to supply the dental pulps indicate that the pulpal CGRP fibers are sensory in nature and that CGRP together with SP may participate in the regulation of local blood flow and the response to local inflammation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call