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Nerve repair: A mix of transplanted nerves (green) and newly generating axons (red) growing in a rat.
Doug Smith, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
The tissue creates a scaffold for nerve tissue regeneration.
Researchers have shown that artificially stretched nerve "bridges" can guide the natural regrowth of damaged nerve tissue in rats. This technique may eventually provide an effective treatment for people who suffer nerve damage as a result of injury or surgery.
Nerve fibers, called axons, extend from neurons and carry electrical signals around the body. When a nerve is severed, both the axon and its supportive myelin sheath are damaged. Although axons grow back after being severed, they do not do so fast enough, or over sufficient distance, to repair major damage.
At present, surgeons lack effective treatment for these injuries. Small amounts of nerve tissue can be harvested from elsewhere in a patient's body and longer stretches of nerve fibers can sometimes be supplied by tissue donors, but in the latter case, a patient must take immunosuppressant drugs so that the donor tissue is not rejected.
A team led by Douglas Smith, professor and director of the University of Pennsylvania's Center for Brain Injury and Repair, has been able to grow artificially stretched nerve tissues and place them inside guiding tubes. They then used these tissue tubes to bridge the gap between severed nerve tissues in rats and found that the scaffolds promoted the regrowth of axon tissue at either end.
"What we've done is created a 3-D neural network, a mini nervous system that is kind of like jumper cables," says Smith. The research is reported in the latest issue of the journal Tissue Engineering.
To begin, the researchers placed rat neurons in two dishes and chemically coaxed them to sprout axons. Using a computer-controlled system, they gradually pulled the two dishes apart, stretching the axons to about a centimeter over seven days. Finally, the axons were embedded in a supportive collagen scaffold and inserted into tubes made of polyglycolic acid.
The team used these tubes to connect severed sciatic nerves, which run from the lower back into the leg. As the axons from the rats' severed nerves grew into the tubing, the new and transplanted tissue intertwined. The outer synthetic tube disintegrated over four months, leaving a normal-functioning nerve in its place. By measuring electrical signals passing through the damaged nerves and performing behavioral tests, the researchers found that the nerves had regrown successfully.
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