Partners Abstracts Publications Auditorium Videos Library  
Market Place Education and Training Meeting Rooms Other Sites E-books Back to the Main Page  


Degeneration and Regeneration of Perivascular Innervation in Arterial Grafts

Penttilä H, Waris T, Ashammakhi N, Vanhatalo S.

Abstract
Post-operative survival of arterial grafts is a major challenge in transplantation surgery. The vasospasms remain an important cause of graft failures, while the understanding about post-operative changes in arterial graft innervation is negligible.
This study was performed to characterize the neuronal degeneration and regeneration in femoral artery grafts transplanted to carotid artery in rats. Perivascular innervation was assessed at 1, 3 and 7 days, as well as at 1, 3 and 5 months postoperatively. We studied by immunohistochemistry markers for neuronal cytoskeleton (neurofilaments and growth associated protein-43), parasympathetic innervation (vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) and neuronal nitrix oxide sybthase (nNOS)), sympathetic innervation (tyrosine hydroxylase), as well as endothelial and incudible NOS isoforms.

During neuronal degeneration, neuropeptide VIP disappeared within the first postoperative day, enzymes (nNOS and TH) were vanished by the day 7, and cytoskeletal neurofilament essentially diappeared after one week. During regeneration, the most robust axonal growth, as visualized by GAP-43 immunoreactivity, was observed at one month, followed by gradual increase in transmitter markers upto three months. Neurofilaments increased throughout the five month follow-up period. Major portion of the re-innervating nerves proceeded from the proximal carotid artery (host) distally to the graft. The primary pathway of axonal regrowth was in arterial adventitial layer. The innervation density appeared to be denser in the graft than in the host.
Our findings suggest that i) the main sequence of neuronal degeneration and regeneration in vascular grafts is essentially similar to that reported in other tissues, ii) re-innervation of the arterial graft comes mainly from the host artery, iii) and the innervation pattern in the graft is different from the host.

Keywords: Arterial graft, transplantation, innervation, degeneration, regeneration, vasospasm, sympathetic innervation, free flaps, microsurgery