Author:
Francel Paul C.,Smith Kevin S.,Stevens F. Alan,Kim Soon C.,Gossett James,Gossett Cynthia,Davis Mark E.,Lenaerts Marc,Tompkins Paul
Abstract
Object. This study was conducted to evaluate peripheral nerve regeneration through a conduit composed of a bioresorbable material (LactoSorb).
Methods. Sprague—Dawley rats weighing approximately 250 g were randomized into five groups. A 20-mm-long sciatic nerve gap was created, then it was bridged by a reverse nerve autograft (Group I), an empty silicone tube (Group II), a silicone tube containing a short (2-mm) interposed nerve segment (Group III), an empty LactoSorb conduit (Group IV), or a LactoSorb conduit containing a 2-mm interposed nerve segment (Group V). The intact sciatic nerve served as the control in each animal.
At 16 weeks postoperatively, no nerve regeneration was observed through either the empty silicone tube or the empty LactoSorb conduit. There was regeneration in all animals receiving the reverse autograft as well as in all animals receiving the silicone or LactoSorb conduit containing the 2-mm interposed nerve segment. Effective regeneration was assessed based on histological, electrophysiological, and morphometric criteria.
Conclusions. The results indicate that a conduit made of resorbable material will support sciatic nerve regeneration over a critical gap defect.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Cited by
30 articles.
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