Zuniga J R
Department of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, School of Dentistry 27599-7450, USA.
J Oral Maxillofac Surg. 1999 Apr;57(4):427-37. doi: 10.1016/s0278-2391(99)90284-7.
Animal studies have suggested that peripheral nerve transection results in substantial loss of ganglion cells and the selective survival of cells based on size. The implications are that subsequent repair of peripheral nerve injuries will be determined by the numerical density and character of the surviving cells. The purpose of this study was twofold: First, to determine the effect of mental nerve transection without repair on trigeminal ganglion cell density and morphology in adult rats, and second, to determine the variation of trigeminal ganglion cell density and morphology after immediate and delayed repair.
In the first part of the study, 12 adult male Sprague-Dawley rats had their mental nerves exposed bilaterally (n = 24). Twelve mental nerves were then transected and prevented from regenerating, and the remaining 12 nerves were uninjured. Ninety and 180 days after transection or sham surgery, the trigeminal ganglia were serially cut into 5 microm longitudinal sections along the dorsoventral axis. The volume and volume density of the mandibular mental subdivision containing sensory cells was determined at each section level with point-counting methods. The numerical density and total number of cells was estimated on the same section, using an unbiased three-dimensional stereological probe, the dissector. Cell size and shape determinants were estimated using the dissector and computerized planimetry. In the second part of the study, six rats had the mental nerves transected bilaterally and immediately repaired by microscopic sutures. In six additional rats, the repair was delayed for 90 days. In both groups, the trigeminal ganglia were serially cut at 30, 60, and 90 days post-repair and stereologic estimates of numerical density and histomorphometry were examined using the dissector and computed planimetry.
In the trigeminal ganglia of the 12 sham-operated animals, the mean number of cells was 20.6 x 10(3) (+/-2.9 X 10(3)). After nerve section, the mean number of cells was 10.88 X 10(3) (+/-0.9 X 10(3)), representing a 47% reduction. The mean volume of the mandibular subdivision cells in the ganglia of the sham surgery animals was 0.3 mm3 (+/-0.05) and 0.22 mm3 (+/-0.04) in nerve-sectioned ganglia, a 38% difference. There were no ganglia cell size or shape differences between the two groups. The mean number of cells in the ganglia of immediately repaired nerves was 10.66 x 10(3)(+/-1.1 X 10(3)), and it was 12.45 x 10(3) (+/-0.9 x 10(3)) after delayed repair. The numerical density was significantly less than in the sham surgery ganglia but not different from that of the transection/no repair ganglia. The weighted mean reference volume of the mandibular subdivision after immediate and delayed repair was similar and was significantly greater than the transection/no repair group, but not different from the sham surgery group. The cell size was slightly larger in delayed-repair ganglia compared with immediate-repair ganglia, but the differences were not significant. There were no significant differences in any of the stereologic estimates when analyzed across treatment time.
The results of this study agree with previous reports that peripheral nerve transection produces a substantial loss of nerve cells within specified regions of sensory ganglions. However, the results conflict with evidence that cells survive transection based on size and shape. These findings also indicate that in the adult rat the substantial loss of nerve cells was unaltered by the reconnection of their severed axons. Neither immediate or delayed repair of the transected nerve altered the spectrum of surviving cells based on size or shape. The reestablishment of the mean reference volume of the mandibular subdivision after section and repair suggests that demands made on regenerating axons appear to result in the restoration of ganglionic volume normally lost after axotomy, probably the result of axo
动物研究表明,周围神经横断会导致大量神经节细胞丢失,且细胞会根据大小选择性存活。这意味着随后周围神经损伤的修复将由存活细胞的数量密度和特性决定。本研究的目的有两个:第一,确定成年大鼠颏神经横断后不修复对三叉神经节细胞密度和形态的影响;第二,确定即刻修复和延迟修复后三叉神经节细胞密度和形态的变化。
在研究的第一部分,12只成年雄性Sprague-Dawley大鼠双侧暴露颏神经(n = 24)。然后将12条颏神经横断并阻止其再生,其余12条神经未损伤。横断或假手术后90天和180天,将三叉神经节沿背腹轴连续切成5微米的纵向切片。使用点计数法在每个切片水平测定包含感觉细胞的下颌颏亚区的体积和体积密度。在同一切片上,使用无偏三维体视学探针——解剖器,估计细胞的数量密度和总数。使用解剖器和计算机化平面测量法估计细胞大小和形状决定因素。在研究的第二部分,6只大鼠双侧横断颏神经并立即通过显微缝合进行修复。另外6只大鼠,修复延迟90天。在两组中,修复后30天、60天和90天对三叉神经节进行连续切片,并使用解剖器和计算机化平面测量法检查数量密度的体视学估计和组织形态计量学。
在12只假手术动物的三叉神经节中,细胞平均数量为20.6×10³(±2.9×10³)。神经横断后,细胞平均数量为10.88×10³(±0.9×10³),减少了47%。假手术动物神经节中下颌亚区细胞的平均体积为0.3立方毫米(±0.05),神经横断的神经节中为0.22立方毫米(±0.04),相差38%。两组之间神经节细胞大小或形状无差异。即刻修复神经的神经节中细胞平均数量为10.66×10³(±1.1×10³),延迟修复后为12.45×10³(±0.9×10³)。数量密度显著低于假手术神经节,但与横断/未修复神经节无差异。即刻修复和延迟修复后下颌亚区的加权平均参考体积相似,且显著大于横断/未修复组,但与假手术组无差异。延迟修复神经节中的细胞大小比即刻修复神经节中的略大,但差异不显著。在整个治疗时间分析时,任何体视学估计均无显著差异。
本研究结果与先前报道一致,即周围神经横断会导致感觉神经节特定区域内神经细胞大量丢失。然而,结果与细胞根据大小和形状在横断后存活的证据相矛盾。这些发现还表明,在成年大鼠中,神经细胞的大量丢失不会因切断轴突的重新连接而改变。横断神经的即刻或延迟修复均未改变基于大小或形状的存活细胞谱。横断和修复后下颌亚区平均参考体积的重建表明,对再生轴突的需求似乎导致了轴突切断后通常丢失的神经节体积的恢复,这可能是轴突的结果。