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Neurotoxicity of local anesthetics: altered perineurial permeability, edema, and nerve fiber injury.
- R R Myers, M W Kalichman, L S Reisner, and H C Powell.
- Anesthesiology. 1986 Jan 1; 64 (1): 29-35.
AbstractA quantitative, in situ experimental method was developed employing the rat sciatic nerve to study the neurotoxicity of local anesthetic solutions applied directly to an intact peripheral nerve bundle. One-milliliter volumes of 2-chloroprocaine, 3%; tetracaine, 1%; lidocaine, 2%; bupivacaine, 0.75%; or sodium chloride, 0.2%; were injected with a 30-gauge needle beneath the mesoneurium but exterior to the epineurium. The wound was closed and the animals were normally maintained until the nerves were reexposed for quantitative biophysical and morphologic testing 24 h to 4 weeks later. The results indicate that topically applied 2-chloroprocaine and tetracaine produce significant endoneurial edema 48 h after treatment. Horseradish peroxidase was used to verify increased permeability of the perineurium. Endoneurial fluid pressure was significantly increased in edematous nerves. Electron microscopy revealed abnormal mast cells and proliferation of endoneurial fibroblasts in addition to Schwann cell injury and axonal dystrophy. This study shows that extrafascicular administration of clinically used concentrations of local anesthetic solutions can alter perineurial permeability, producing changes in the endoneurial environment that are associated with neurotoxic injury. Perineurial and endoneurial fibrotic changes may be a late consequence of peripheral nerve injury with anesthetic solutions producing altered perineurial permeability with endoneurial edema.
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