Abstract

Motor function recovery following acellular nerve allograft (ANA) repair remains inferior to autologous nerve reconstruction. We investigated the functional recovery of ANAs after combined mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) delivery and surgical angiogenesis in a rat sciatic nerve defect model. In 100 Lewis rats, unilateral sciatic nerve defects were reconstructed with (I) autografts, (II) ANAs, (III) ANAs wrapped with a superficial inferior epigastric artery fascial (SIEF) flap, combined with either (IV) undifferentiated MSCs or (V) Schwann cell-like differentiated MSCs. The tibialis anterior muscle area was evaluated during the survival period using ultrasonography. Functional recovery, histomorphometry, and immunofluorescence were assessed at 12 and 16 weeks. At 12 weeks, the addition of surgical angiogenesis and MSCs improved ankle contractures. The SIEF flap also significantly improved compound muscle action potential (CMAP) outcomes compared with ANAs. Autografts outperformed all groups in muscle force and weight. At 16 weeks, ankle contractures of ANAs remained inferior to autografts and SIEF, whereas the CMAP amplitude was comparable between groups. The muscle force of autografts remained superior to all other groups, and the muscle weight of ANAs remained inferior to autografts. No differences were found in histomorphometry outcomes between SIEF groups and ANAs. Vascularity, determined by CD34 staining, was significantly higher in SIEF groups compared with ANAs. The combination of surgical angiogenesis and MSCs did not result in a synergistic improvement in functional outcomes. In a short nerve gap model, the adipofascial flap may provide sufficient MSCs to ANAs without additional ex vivo MSC seeding.

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