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  Vol. 122 No. 7, July 1996 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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A Functional Model of Nerve Repair

Reanastomosis vs Entubulation Repair

Diane M. Shirley, MD; Sherri L. Williams, MS; James F. Covey, MS; Perry M. Santos, MD, MS

Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1996;122(7):785-788.


Abstract

Objective
To compare reanastomosis and entubulation repair after transection of the peroneal nerve in rats with the use of 2 functional models: gait analysis and a tension transduction device.

Design
Prospective, randomized, blinded control study. Each animal served as its own control. The injured site was alternated between the left and the right. Gait analysis was evaluated in a blind fashion at postoperative weeks 1, 3, 7, and 13, and the tension transduction device at week 13, for injured and uninjured legs.

Subjects
Animals underwent unilateral peroneal nerve transection injury, half with entubulation and half with end-to-end reanastomosis repair.

Intervention
Nerve transection was performed 6 mm proximal to the anterior tibialis muscle insertion followed by reanastomosis (epineurial suture placement to align the sectioned nerve ends) or entubulation (placement of nerve ends into a 4-mm-long sterile Silastic tube secured with 2 epineurial sutures).

Results
Gait analysis demonstrated a poorer ankle angle in all injured legs compared with uninjured legs at each postoperative period. Ankle angles for reanastomosis were statistically better than those for entubulation at weeks 3, 7, and 13. The tension transduction device demonstrated poorer force in injured than uninjured animals at 13 weeks. Reanastomosis repair groups demonstrated no difference in force development compared with entubulation repair groups.

Conclusions
Reanastomosis of the transected rat peroneal nerve demonstrated improved functional return by gait analysis when compared with entubulation-repaired nerves at postoperative weeks 3, 7, and 13. Force development of injured nerve groups measured by the tension transduction device was decreased compared with control, but no difference was detected between the 2 repair methods. Further studies are needed to evaluate the possible functional benefit of reanastomosis.

Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg. 1996;122:785-788



Author Affiliations

From the Division of Otolaryngology, Southern Illinois University, Springfield (Drs Shirley and Santos and Mr Covey); and School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Illinois, Champaign (Ms Williams).



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Neuroprotection Due to Irrigation During Bipolar Cautery
Donzelli et al.
Arch Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg 2000;126:149-153.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  





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