Abstract

The extracellular fluid pathway in the facial nerve and the diffusion of a tracer from the facial nerve to other cranial nerves was examined in the rabbit. Sodium fluorescein solution was injected into either the facial nerve fascicles or the epineurial connective tissue as a tracer at the stylomastoid foramen and then localized by fluorescence microscopy. In the facial nerve, fluorescence was observed in the endoneurium and external nerve sheath (epineurium and perineurium) through the geniculate ganglion following injection into the nerve fascicles. The vestibular, trigeminal, and glossopharyngeal ganglia also showed fluorescence on the injection side in ganglion cells and intercellular connective tissues. The results suggested that the endoneurial connective tissue constitutes a diffusion pathway inside the facial nerve fascicles and that the extracellular fluid pathway from the facial nerve to these cranial ganglia may be related to the neural spread of inflammation or neoplastic metastasis.

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