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Nerve Samples (nerve + sample)
Selected AbstractsInvestigating mechanical behaviour at a core,sheath interface in peripheral nerveJOURNAL OF THE PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM, Issue 4 2004Rachel L. Tillett Abstract As peripheral nerves bend and stretch, internal elements need to move in relation to each other. However, the way in which intraneural components interact is poorly understood. Previous work identified a distinct core and sheath in the rat sciatic nerve and provides a useful model with which to investigate this interaction. Here we have focused on identifying the mechanical and anatomical characteristics of the interface between core and sheath. Nerve samples, 15 and 20 mm long, of rat sciatic nerves were harvested and placed in a purpose-built jig, and a tensile testing machine was used to pull core from sheath. Mechanical tests of specimens in which core had been previously pulled from sheath by 25% of its initial length achieved a mean pull-out force approximately six times smaller than that achieved using intact controls. These results are consistent with the proposal that core,sheath interactions involve physical connections rather than a viscous fluid interface. Anatomical features of this interface were characterised using transmission electron microscopy. It appeared that sheath was derived from epineurium and most of the perineurium, whilst core consisted of endoneurium and a small proportion of the perineurium: the plane of cleavage appeared to involve the innermost perineurial cell layer. [source] Peptidergic modulation of male sexual behavior in Lymnaea stagnalis: structural and functional characterization of ,FVamide neuropeptidesJOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY, Issue 5 2003A. B. Smit Abstract In the simultaneous hermaphrodite snail Lymnaea stagnalis, copulation as a male is controlled by neurons that send axons to the male copulatory organs via a single penis nerve. Using direct mass spectrometry of a penis nerve sample, we show that one of the molecular ions has a mass corresponding to GAPRFVamide, previously identified from the buccal ganglia, and named Lymnaea inhibitory peptide (LIP). The identity of this peptide is confirmed by partial peptide purification from the penis nerve, followed by post source decay mass spectrometry. We cloned the LIP-encoding cDNA, which predicts a prohormone that gives rise to five copies of LIP (now re-named LIP A), two other ,FVamide peptides (LIPs B and C), and five structurally unrelated peptides. The LIP gene is expressed in neurons of the right cerebral ventral lobe that send their axons into the penis nerve. We show that the LIP A peptide is present in these neurons and in the penis nerve, and confirmed the presence of LIP B and C in the penis nerve by post source decay mass spectrometry. Finally, we demonstrate that LIP A, B and C inhibit the contractions of the penis retractor muscle, thereby implicating their role in male copulation behavior. [source] Relationship between fascicle size and perineurial collagen IV content in diabetic and control human peripheral nerveHISTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 6 2000P E Williams Aim: The relationship between perineurial collagen IV content and fascicle size was determined in diabetic and control human peripheral nerve. Methods and results Age-matched diabetic and control sural nerve samples were immunostained using antibodies to collagen IV. The number of cell layers and the perimeter of the fascicle were measured and the collagen IV content of the perineurium determined. Using this method, a comparison could be made of collagen IV content in the perineuria of fascicles of different size. A positive linear relationship was found between fascicle size and the amount of collagen IV per unit of perineurium. The number of perineurial cell layers and the collagen IV content of the diabetic nerve did not differ from control values. Conclusions The linear relationship between fascicle size and perineurial collagen IV content per unit of perineurium underlines the importance of taking fascicle size into account when determining changes in basement membrane components associated with neuropathy. The results indicate that increased deposition of collagen IV is not involved in the early changes in the perineurial cell basement membrane and is thus not the primary factor involved in altered nerve function associated with diabetic neuropathy. [source] Pure neural leprosy: Diagnostic value of the polymerase chain reactionMUSCLE AND NERVE, Issue 3 2006Francisco M. Bezerra Da Cunha MD Abstract Pure neural leprosy (PNL) is often difficult to diagnose when acid-fast bacilli (AFB) cannot be detected. We undertook the present study to evaluate use of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) in diagnosing PNL. Fifty-eight patients (41 men and 17 women) suspected of pure neural leprosy (PNL) were examined. Patients were classified as borderline tuberculoid (BT, 40 cases) and polar tuberculoid (TT, 18 cases) types. Nerve biopsy was performed and was positive for AFB in 20 patients (all BT patients), i.e., 34.5% of total cases. DNA was extracted from the nerve biopsy samples and amplified using PCR for a specific repeated sequence of DNA from Mycobacterium leprae. PCR analysis was positive in the nerve samples from 29 patients (50%), 27 of the BT type, and 2 of the TT type patients. Further, PCR analysis was positive in 14 of 38 cases that were negative for AFB by nerve biopsy, of which 12 were of the BT type and 2 the TT type. PCR analysis proved to be a useful method to investigate pure neural leprosy, enabling confirmation of the diagnosis in more than a third of the cases that were negative for AFB by nerve biopsy. Muscle Nerve 2006 [source] |