American Society for Peripheral Nerve

Back to 2015 Annual Meeting Program


Morphometric and Functional Analysis of Axonal Regeneration after End-to-End and End-to Side Neurorrhaphy in Rats
Carlos Eduardo Fagotti Almeida, MD, PhD Division of Plastic Surgery, Ribeirão Preto Medical School – University of São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, Brazil
Background: End-to-side neurorrhaphy is controversial in the literature, with discussion about the degree of recovery. In this study, nerve regeneration was assessed in rats after end-to-side neurorrhaphy by morphometric analysis, electromyography, electron microscopy and retrograde horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and Fluoro-gold® (FG) transport, and compared to end-to-end neurorrhaphy and sham operation.

Methods: 37 animals were operated and divided randomly into four groups: group 1 - sham, group 2 - end-to-end neurorrhaphy, group 3 - end-to-side neurorrhaphy with an epineural window (w/w), and group 4 - end-to-side neurorrhaphy without an epineural window (wt/w). Three months after surgery, HRP was injected in the peroneal muscles. After 48 hours, nerve segments and lumbar spine segments were collected. Electromyography data were compared between groups and FG uptake was compared in 20 other animals. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) with Tukey-Kramer correction was used for group comparison.

Results: The fiber count after end-to-end neurorrhaphy was higher than after end-to-side neurorrhaphy w/w (q = 5.243 and p <0.01) or wt/w (q = 4.951 and p <0.01). The sham group had a higher perimeter than group 3 (q = 7.211 and p <0.001) and group 4 (q = 6.971 and p <0.001). HRP labeling showed a difference between group 2 and end-to-side neurorrhaphy w/w (q = 5.291 and p <0.01) and wt/w (q = 5.617 and p <0.01). There was also a difference in mean area labeled with FG. Furthermore, the amplitudes of the action potentials were significantly higher in groups 1 and 2.

Conclusions: There was nerve regeneration in all groups studied. However, the end-to-end neurorrhaphy group had better reinnervation than the end-to-side neurorrhaphy groups


Back to 2015 Annual Meeting Program