Abstract

Patients sustaining a peripheral nerve injury will frequently experience residual muscle weakness after muscle reinnervation, even if the nerve repair is performed under optimal circumstances to allow rapid muscle reinnervation. The mechanisms responsible for this contractile dysfunction remain unclear. It is hypothesized that after peripheral nerve injury and repair, a reduced number of axons are available for skeletal muscle reinnervation that results in whole muscle force and specific force deficits. A rat model of peroneal nerve injury and repair was designed so that the number of axons available for reinnervation could be systematically reduced. In adult rats, the peroneal nerve to the extensor digitorum longus muscle was either left intact (sham group, n = 8) or divided and repaired with either 50 percent (R50 group, n = 7) or 100 percent (R100 group, n = 8) of the axons in the proximal stump included in the repair. Four months after surgery, maximal tetanic isometric force was measured and specific force was calculated for each animal. Mean tetanic isometric force for extensor digitorum longus muscles from R50 rats (2765.7 +/- 767.6 mN) was significantly lower than sham (4082.8 +/- 196.5 mN) and R100 (3729.0 +/-370.2 mN) rats (p < 0.003). Mean specific force calculations revealed significant deficits in both the R100 (242.1 +/- 30 kN/m2) and R50 (190.6 +/- 51.8 kN/m2) rats compared with the sham animals (295.9 +/- 14 kN/m2) (p < 0.0005). These data support our hypothesis that after peripheral nerve injury and repair, reinnervation of skeletal muscle by a reduced number of axons results in a reduction in tetanic isometric force and specific force. The greater relative reduction in specific force compared with absolute force production after partial nerve repair may indicate that a population of residual denervated muscle fibers is responsible for this deficit.

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