Abstract

Semipermeable guidance channels have been shown to support nerve regeneration in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) possibly through interactions with the wound healing environment. This study quantitatively assesses the ability of such channels to support regeneration in the PNS segment of the spinal roots across a 4 mm gap and compares the resultant dorsal and ventral root regeneration. Acrylic copolymer guidance channels with a molecular weight (Mw) cutoff of 50,000 Da were used in a transected rat spinal root model. Cohorts of 23 animals (11 ventral, 12 dorsal) were examined at four weeks; 6 animals (3 ventral, 3 dorsal) at ten weeks; and 10 animals (5 ventral, 5 dorsal) at twenty-four weeks post-implantation. Both the dorsal and ventral roots were able to regenerate across the gap within the semipermeable channel. At all time periods, the regenerated dorsal roots contained fewer myelinated axons than found in the contralateral control root and consisted of an abundance of collagenous tissue. In contrast, by ten weeks the regenerated ventral roots contained twice the contralateral control number of myelinated axons and were composed predominantly of large, myelinated axons. At twenty-four weeks the number of unmyelinated axons was also quantified, with the regenerated dorsal root containing only one-fifth of the control number and the regenerated ventral root containing more than four times the control. Due to the proximity of the dorsal root lesion to the axonal cell bodies, the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neuronal cell loss was investigated at four weeks post-implantation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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