
April 9,
2004
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Nerve
damage can affect both sides of body
MGH researchers have found evidence of a previously unknown communication
between nerves on opposite sides of the body. In the upcoming Annals
of Neurology, scientists describe how cutting a major nerve in one
paw of a group of rats resulted in a significant decrease in skin nerve
endings in the corresponding area of the opposite limb. The study may
have major implications for the care of patients with nerve damage and
also questions the common practice of using opposite-side tissues as controls
in scientific experiments.
"Patients with pain syndromes related to nerve damage sometimes report
symptoms on the side opposite their injury, but those reports are usually
discounted because there has been no biological framework for the phenomenon,"
says Anne Louise Oaklander, MD, PhD, director of the MGH Nerve Injury
Unit, the report's principal author.
Reports of opposite-side sensory effects of injury date back more than
100 years. No connections are known to exist, however, between nerve cells
supplying corresponding areas on the left and right sides. Oaklander and
Jennifer Brown studied a group of rats in which the tibial branch of the
sciatic nerve was cut in one back paw and in two control groups, one had
sham surgery and the other had no procedures. Within one week of injury,
rats in the experimental group lost almost all skin nerve endings in the
area supplied by the severed tibial nerve and also lost 54 percent of
nerve endings in the corresponding area in the opposite paw. No changes
were seen in either control group.
"This loss of nerve fibers in the contralateral limb is so precise
that the communication is likely to involve nerve cells or the supporting
glial cells," says Oaklander. "We need to look into what regulates
this communication and how it may be altered to help treat nerve injury
and pain patients."
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