• Brain research · May 1986

    Cell loss in lumbar dorsal root ganglia and transganglionic degeneration after sciatic nerve resection in the rat.

    • J Arvidsson, J Ygge, and G Grant.
    • Brain Res. 1986 May 14;373(1-2):15-21.

    AbstractThe effects of sciatic nerve resection on lumbar dorsal root ganglion cells and their central branches have been studied in the adult rat. A quantitative analysis of the lumbar dorsal root ganglia indicated a 15-30% cell loss on the operated side. Argyrophilia indicating transganglionic degeneration was observed in Fink-Heimer stained sections from the lumbar spinal cord and the brainstem. The areas of degeneration argyrophilia were mainly located in the medial part of the ipsilateral L2-L6 dorsal horn laminae I-IV, the tract of Lissauer, the dorsal funiculus and the gracile nucleus. A few degenerating fibers could also be observed in the ipsilateral dorsal horn laminae V and VI, and in the ipsilateral ventral horn as well as in the contralateral dorsal horn and the gracile nucleus. The results confirm and extend previous findings at other levels and in other species. This suggests that cell loss and transganglionic degeneration may be general phenomena affecting a substantial proportion of primary sensory neurons following peripheral nerve injury.

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