Degeneration and regeneration of peripheral nerve in the rat trigeminal system: III. Abnormal sensory reinnervation of rat guard hairs following nerve transection and crush
- 8 May 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 283 (2) , 169-176
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.902830202
Abstract
The present study was undertaken in an attempt to better understand the abnormalities of cutaneous sensibility that are present in patients following nerve injury with concomitant cutaneous denervation and subsequent reinnervation. Reinnervated intervibrissal pelage of the rat mystacial pad was studied in silver‐impregnated sections 3 and 5 months after transecting and 2 and 5 months after crushing the infraorbital nerve. The sensory terminals on guard and vellus hairs were analyzed in serial paraffin sections and in thick frozen sections. In normal rat mystacial skin, approximately nine/ten of innervated guard hairs have a typical piloneural complex consisting of a palisade of highly regular lanceolate terminals surrounded by circularly arranged Ruffini terminals and free nerve endings (FNEs). The remaining one of ten innervated guard hairs has only circularly arranged presumptive FNEs and Ruffini terminals. Vellus hairs, either singly or in clusters, typically have only circularly arranged terminals that in many cases are simple FNEs. We first recognized abnormalities in innervation of hairs following nerve transection and fully expected nerve terminals to be completely normal following nerve crush. Almost all reinnervated sensory nerve terminals associated with guard hairs were markedly abnormal following nerve transection and quantitatively abnormal following nerve crush. Following nerve transection, lanceolate terminals were almost completely absent, and they were remarkably reduced in number following nerve crush. Vellus hairs when reinnervated typically lacked the complex circular presumptive Ruffini terminals. These findings may be in part the basis for the abnormal cutaneous sensory perceptions (dysasthesias and paresthesias) noted in human subjects following damage to nerves with subsequent sensory reinnervation of the skin. Our findings are in accord with the reports of subtle physiologic abnormalities following nerve transection and crush. Morphologically abnormal reinnervated sensory terminals may retain modality specificity but in addition respond abnormally. These conclusions may be in part the basis for abnormal sensibilities that have been reported following crushing damage to peripheral nerves.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- The early ontogeny of the afferent nerves and papillary ridges in human digital glabrous skinDevelopmental Brain Research, 1989
- Neuroanatomical evidence of reinnervation in primate allografted (transplanted) skin during cyclosporine immunosuppressionNeuroscience Letters, 1986
- On the formation of eye dominance stripes and patches in the doubly-innervated optic tectum of the chickDevelopmental Brain Research, 1985
- Ontogeny of Auditory System FunctionAnnual Review of Physiology, 1984
- Multiple axon terminals in reinnervated Pacinian corpuscles of adult ratJournal of Neurocytology, 1984
- Degeneration of mouse digital corpusclesJournal of Anatomy, 1982
- An ultrastructural study of transganglionic degeneration in the main sensory trigeminal nucleus of the ratJournal of Neurocytology, 1979
- Nerve cell degeneration and death in the trigeminal ganglion of the adult rat following peripheral nerve transectionJournal of Neurocytology, 1978
- HENRY HEAD: THE MAN AND HIS IDEASBrain, 1961
- A HUMAN EXPERIMENT IN NERVE DIVISIONBrain, 1908