Inverted human umbilical artery as a 3D scaffold for sciatic nerve regeneration in rats.

Cell and tissue banking 2022 Vol.23(4) p. 909-922

Lecoq FA, Barnouin L, Ardouin L, Hartmann D, Obert L

Abstract

Treatment of peripheral nerve injuries (PNIs) remains a challenge. Interposing a graft delivers better regenerative outcomes. Autografts present major drawbacks which have given rise to the development of alternatives such as artificial scaffolds, some of which are very promising. This study was designed to investigate the potential use of an inverted human umbilical cord artery (iHUA) as a 3D scaffold nerve chamber, for nerve regeneration after transection of the sciatic nerve (SN) in rats. Rats underwent surgical SN transection in their right hindlimb, followed by suture of the device at the resected stumps. Local tolerance, insert biodegradability and nerve reconstruction over time were thoroughly studied by histopathological and morphometric analysis, completed by functional test assessment of sensitivity and motricity recovery. We have demonstrated that nerve reconstruction in the presence of an iHUA insert is effective. The device is well tolerated and highly biodegraded. Although the regenerated nerve is still immature at the end of our study, signs of sensitivity and partial functional recovery were witnessed, confirming our histological findings. Our results support the potential clinical use of iHUA as a 3D scaffold to bridge nerve discontinuity and guide axonal regrowth in selected cases of PNIs.

추출된 의학 개체 (NER)

유형영어 표현한국어 / 풀이UMLS CUI출처등장
해부 human umbilical artery scispacy 1
해부 graft scispacy 1
해부 Autografts scispacy 1
해부 nerve scispacy 1
합병증 PNIs → peripheral nerve injuries scispacy 1
질환 peripheral nerve injuries C0262593
Peripheral Nerve Injuries
scispacy 1
질환 PNIs → peripheral nerve injuries scispacy 1
기타 sciatic nerve scispacy 1
기타 rats scispacy 1
기타 peripheral nerve scispacy 1
기타 human umbilical cord artery scispacy 1

MeSH Terms

Humans; Rats; Animals; Umbilical Arteries; Sciatic Nerve; Nerve Regeneration; Axons; Autografts