Abstract

Although microsuture neurorrhaphy is the accepted clinical standard treatment for severed peripheral nerves, this technique requires microsurgical proficiency and still often fails to provide adequate nerve approximation for effective regeneration. Entubulation utilizing commercially available conduits may enhance the technical quality of the nerve coaptation and potentially provide a proregenerative microenvironment, but still requires precise suture placement. We developed a sutureless nerve coaptation device, Nerve Tape®, that utilizes Nitinol microhooks embedded within a porcine small intestinal submucosa backing. These tiny microhooks engage the outer epineurium of the nerve, while the backing wraps the coaptation to provide a stable, entubulated repair. In this study, we examine the impact of Nerve Tape on nerve tissue and axonal regeneration, compared with repairs performed with commercially available conduit-assisted or microsuture-only repairs. Eighteen male New Zealand white rabbits underwent a tibial nerve transection, immediately repaired with (1) Nerve Tape, (2) conduit plus anchoring sutures, or (3) four 9-0 nylon epineurial microsutures. At 16 weeks postinjury, the nerves were re-exposed to test sensory and motor nerve conduction, measure target muscle weight and girth, and perform nerve tissue histology. Nerve conduction velocities in the Nerve Tape group were significantly better than both the microsuture and conduit groups, while nerve compound action potential amplitudes in the Nerve Tape group were significantly better than the conduit group only. Gross morphology, muscle characteristics, and axon histomorphometry were not statistically different between the three repair groups. In the rabbit tibial nerve repair model, Nerve Tape offers similar regeneration efficacy compared with conduit-assisted and microsuture-only repairs, suggesting minimal impact of microhooks on nerve tissue.

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