Abstract

Clinical experience shows that the results after the use of long nerve grafts for reconstruction are sometimes poor. Nevertheless several authors have stressed that the concomitant big defect in the soft tissues necessitating the use of long grafts is the reason for some of the failures. In 22 rabbits the saphenous nerve was used as a nerve graft. Animals were separated into 3 groups with different lengths of the grafts, namely 3 cm (group 1), 5 cm (group 2) and 7 cm (group 3). In the left hindlimb the proximal end of the graft was coapted to the cut motor nerve branch of vastus medialis. In a second stage the distal end of the graft was coapted to the nerve branch of rectus femoris. After a total period of 15 months the maximum tetanic tension in the reinnervated rectus femoris and in the contralateral unoperated muscle was determined. Biopsies of the graft and the motor branch distal to the graft were taken in order to count the number of regenerated myelinated nerve fibers. The average maximum tetanic tension in the rectus femoris muscle reinnervated by the 3 cm long graft was 27.2 N, in group 2 the force was 20.5 N. In group 3 the maximum force was 17.6 N, which meant an average loss of 29% compared to the contralateral unoperated muscle. The mean number of regenerated myelinated fibres distal to the graft in the rectus femoris motor branch was 1683 in group 1 and decreased to 1137 in group 3. The results show that the length of the graft influences the results after nerve grafting to a certain extent, but a combination of other factors like concomitant soft tissue injury and destroyed target organs may also be responsible for some of the poor results after the clinical use of long nerve grafts.

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