Abstract
In order to study age-related processes of degeneration and recovery, the left hemitelencephalon was surgically removed in 5 adult cats and 5 neonatal kittens which were compared to 5 intact controls. After long survival, brains were sectioned in the coronal plane and thionine-stained. Drawings of gross and microscopic thalamic structures were made at 4 planes and computer-digitized to provide 7 measures: total thalamic area at planes A 7.5 and A 8.5; counts of neuroglia, small neurons (31-100 microns2) and large neurons (101-1000 microns2); area of neuroglia, small neurons and large neurons. All cellular measurements were in the ventrobasal complex at planes A 8.0 and A 10.0. Morphological changes were found bilaterally in all lesioned cats. Ipsilateral to the ablation in adult-lesioned cats, thalamic area, large neuron count and glia cells size were markedly and significantly decreased (P less than 0.01), while in neonatal-lesioned cats these changes were present but significantly reduced in magnitude compared to adult-lesioned animals. In addition, adult-lesioned cats showed a marked increase in glial cell numbers (P less than 0.01) and a decrease in small neuron size (P less than 0.01), while kitten-lesioned animals did not show changes in these measures. In the intact side of the brain, the thalamus of adult-lesioned cats was decreased in size (P less than 0.01), and glial cells were decreased in number and size (P less than 0.05), while in kitten-lesioned brains there were few changes. In both lesioned groups large neurons showed a significant increase in size (P less than 0.01). We conclude that neonatal hemispherectomy results in markedly less thalamic atrophy, retrograde neuronal degeneration and gliosis than the equivalent lesion in adults. The changes are discussed in the context of the increased neuroanatomical reorganization and functional recovery which were reported in neonatal- vs adult-lesioned animals.
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