Abstract

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the influence of hormonal milieu on endochondral growth. This was achieved by transplanting hind limbs of juvenile rats to syngeneic adult rats. Because there is no potential for rejection, the limb can be transplanted between animals of different ages, to study the influence of hormonal maturity on stimulation and cessation of physeal growth and maturation. Tibial length and the histologic appearance of the physis were recorded. Whole vascularized hind-limb transplantation in syngeneic Lewis rats was used. Group 1: Thirty-five transplants between animals of the same age (three weeks old) were performed (isochronografts). Group 2: In 35 procedures, the age of the donor was three weeks old and of the recipient, 15 weeks (heterochronografts). In the first two study groups, the transplanted limb was placed on the dorsal flank of the recipient animal without nerve reconstruction. Controls were the contralateral hind limb of the donor animal. Because the limb was transplanted with loss of femoral and sciatic nerve supply to the dorsal flank position, the effects of denervation and lack of weight bearing were also evaluated. Group 3: Thirty-five limbs in three-week-old animals were transposed to the dorsal flank position, after severing the femoral and sciatic nerves. Analysis of variance of tibial length was used to compare study groups. Limbs transplanted to older animals (heterochronografts--Group 2) achieved the greatest length, 91 percent of normal, and significantly more when compared to Groups 1 (84 percent) and 3 (83 percent) (p less than .005). Growth of the limb was adversely affected by limb position and denervation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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