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Muscle Plasticity During Sprouting and Reinnervation
Authors:GORDON  TESSA
Institution:Department of Pharmacology, University of Alberta Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2H7, Canada
Abstract:SYNOPSIS. When peripheral nerves are cut, the axotomized nervesand denervated muscles undergo atrophic changes which are reversedonly when functional connections are remade in the periphery.The restored interaction completely reverses the effects ofaxotomy and denervation and leads to rematching of the sizeof the motoneuron, muscle unit force, speed and histochemicalproperties, according to the size principle. Differences inunit force and fatigue characteristics between motor unit typesare not fully restored in reinnervated muscles but do not obscuresize relationships between the motoneurons and their muscleunits. Although intact motoneurons will supply increased numbers ofmuscle fibers after partial nerve injuries, regenerating axonsappear to be limited in their ability to enlarge their muscleunits. Increased motor unit force in reinnervated slow motorunits is accounted for primarily by an increase in fiber diameter;fast motor units do not increase their mean force output. As a result of the rematching of muscle unit properties withthe size of the motoneurons that reinnervate them, motor unitproperties are appropriate for fine control of movement aftercomplete or partial nerve injuries. However, regenerating axonsdo not reinnervate their original muscle fibers and unless thefibers are injured close to the muscles, they often fail toreinnervate their original muscles. The mismatching of motorpools with inappropriate target muscles is probably the mainfactor responsible for poor recovery of motor function aftercomplete nerve injuries.
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