Abstract

Ex vivo rodent whole nerves provide a model for assessing the effects of interventions on nerve impulse transmission and consequent sensory and/or motor function. Nerve impulse transmission can be measured through sciatic nerve compound action potential (CAP) recordings. However, de novo development and implementation of an ex vivo whole nerve resection protocol and an electrophysiology setup that retains nerve viability, that produces low noise CAP signals, and that allows for data analysis is challenging. Additionally, some of the existing literature lacks detail and accuracy and may be out of date. This article describes detailedprotocols for rodent ex vivo sciatic nerve dissection and handling; importance of an optimal physiologic solution; computer-aided designs for 3D printing of readily adaptable ex vivo rodent whole nerve electrophysiology chambers; construction of low-cost, effective suction electrodes; setup and use of nerve stimulators and amplifiers; acquisition of low noise, small voltage CAP data and digital conversion; use of software for data analyses of CAP components; and tips for troubleshooting. © 2020 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Electrophysiology wiring and hardware setup Support Protocol 1: 3D printing an electrophysiology chamber Support Protocol 2: Building suction electrodes Basic Protocol 2: Sciatic nerve dissection and compound action potential recording Basic Protocol 3: Data export and analysis Support Protocol 3: Preparation of HEPES-buffered physiologic solution.

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