Title of article :
Motorneuron protection by N-acetyl-cysteine after ventral root avulsion and ventral rhizotomy
Author/Authors :
C.-G. Zhang، نويسنده , , D. Welin، نويسنده , , L. Novikov، نويسنده , , Jan-Olof Kellerth، نويسنده , , M. Wiberg، نويسنده , , A.M. Hart، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
Motor recovery after proximal nerve injury remains extremely poor, despite advances in surgical care. Several neurobiological hurdles are implicated, the most fundamental being extensive cell death within the motorneuron pool. N-acetyl-cysteine almost completely protects sensory neurons after peripheral axotomy, hence its efficacy in protecting motorneurons after ventral root avulsion/rhizotomy was investigated.
In adult rats, the motorneurons supplying medial gastrocnemius were unilaterally pre-labelled with retrograde tracer (true-blue/fluoro-gold), prior to L5 and 6 ventral root avulsion, or rhizotomy. Groups received either intraperitoneal N-acetyl-cysteine (ip, 150 or 750 mg/kg/day), immediate or delayed intrathecal N-acetyl-cysteine treatment (it, 2.4 mg/day), or saline; untreated animals served as controls. Either 4 (avulsion model) or 8 (rhizotomy model) weeks later, the pre-labelled motorneuronsʹ mean soma area and survival were quantified.
Untreated controls possessed markedly fewer motorneurons than normal due to cell death (avulsion 53% death; rhizotomy 26% death, P<0.01 vs. normal). Motorneurons were significantly protected by N-acetyl-cysteine after avulsion (ip 150 mg/kg/day 40% death; it 30% death, P<0.01 vs. no treatment), but particularly after rhizotomy (ip 150 mg/kg/day 17% death; ip 750 mg/kg/day 7% death; it 5% death, P<0.05 vs. no treatment). Delaying intrathecal treatment for 1 week after avulsion did not impair neuroprotection, but a 2-week delay was deleterious (42% death, P<0.05 vs. 1-week delay, 32% death). Treatment prevented the decrease in soma area usually found after both types of injury.
N-acetyl-cysteine has considerable clinical potential for adjuvant treatment of major proximal nerve injuries, including brachial plexus injury, in order that motorneurons may survive until surgical repair facilitates regeneration.
Keywords :
Peripheral nerverepair , N-acetyl-cysteine , Motorneuron , neuroprotection , Brachial plexus , Active cell death
Journal title :
Journal of Plastic , Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery
Journal title :
Journal of Plastic , Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgery