The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol 73, Issue 2 172-185, Copyright © 1991 by Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc
Regeneration through nerve allografts in the cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis)
K Tajima, K Tohyama, C Ide and M Abe
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery School of Medicine, Iwate Medical University, Morioka, Japan.
With the use of ulnar nerves of cynomolgus monkeys, the present study
examined whether basal laminae of Schwann cells can serve as conduits for
regenerating axons in nerve allografts from non-human primates. A segment
of ulnar nerve was transected distal to the elbow joint one week before
grafting. In Group A, a distal segment of the transected nerve was
transplanted, after freezing and thawing, into the ulnar nerve of another
monkey, at a level that corresponded to that from which the graft was
taken. In Group B (the control group), the segment of nerve was grafted in
the same manner but without cryotreatment. Two weeks, five weeks, eight
weeks, and five months after grafting, the graft and the host nerve were
examined with light and electron microscopy. Within two weeks after
grafting in Group A, after degradation of the cellular components of the
Schwann cells, the basal laminae of the Schwann cells were intact in the
form of tubes. Within five weeks, many regenerating axons grew out into
these basal lamina tubes in the three-centimeter-long grafts and extended
into the host nerve. As seen at the wrist (seven centimeters from the
distal suture) five months after grafting, the axons exhibited fully mature
myelination both in the graft and in the host nerve. In contrast, in Group
B, in which the Schwann cells had not been disrupted by cryotreatment,
cellular components and connective-tissue matrices, including basal
laminae, had been degraded and had been replaced by invading cells, which
filled the endoneurial spaces of the graft. Five months after grafting,
axonal growth had been arrested in the graft one centimeter distal to the
proximal suture. The beneficial effect in Group A appears to have been the
result of the retention and preservation of intact basal laminae of Schwann
cells after rapid removal of killed Schwann cells and myelin debris.
Killing of Schwann cells by freezing before grafting may abolish the immune
response to the Schwann cells in allografts and lead to fragmentation and
disruption of myelin, which facilitates the rapid removal of myelin by
macrophages.