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Nerve injury in adult rats causes abnormalities in the motoneuron dendritic field that differ from those seen following neonatal nerve injury

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Abstract

Disruption of neuromuscular contact by nerve-crush during the early postnatal period causes increased activity and abnormal reflex responses in affected motoneurons, but such changes are not found after nerve-crush in adult animals. We found previously that neonatally lesioned cells develop an abnormal dendritic field, which may explain the functional changes. Here we have studied the dendritic morphology of the same motoneuron pool after nerve-crush at maturity in order to correlate the observed alterations in morphology with physiological findings. One to two months after sciatic nerve-crush in adult animals, motoneurons supplying the extensor hallucis longus muscles of the rat were retrogradely labelled with cholera toxin subunit-B conjugated to horseradish peroxidase. The dendritic tree of labelled cells was then analysed. Following adult nerve-crush, the dendritic tree of the motoneurons was smaller but did not display the localised increase in dendritic density seen after neonatal nerve-crush. These findings support the view that such specific morphological changes contribute to the physiological abnormalities seen only after neonatal nerve injury.

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O'Hanlon, G.M., Lowrie, M.B. Nerve injury in adult rats causes abnormalities in the motoneuron dendritic field that differ from those seen following neonatal nerve injury. Exp Brain Res 103, 243–250 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00231710

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