- Author:
	        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Jun Mo JUNG
			        		
			        		
			        		
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			        		Moon Sang CHUNG
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Min Bom KIM
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Goo Hyun BAEK
			        		
			        		
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		
			        		Author Information
			        		
 - Publication Type:Original Article ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
 - Keywords: Median nerve; Proximal stump; Peripheral nerve injury; End-to-side neurorrhaphy; Nerve recovery
 - MeSH: Anastomosis, Surgical/methods; Animals; Axons/pathology; Forelimb; Hand Strength; Male; Median Nerve/pathology/*surgery; Muscle Contraction; Muscle, Skeletal/physiopathology; Nerve Regeneration; Nerve Transfer/*methods; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Recovery of Function; Ulnar Nerve/pathology/*surgery
 - From:Clinics in Orthopedic Surgery 2009;1(2):90-95
 - CountryRepublic of Korea
 - Language:English
 - Abstract: BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate the contribution of the proximal nerve stump, in end-to-side nerve repair, to functional recovery, by modifying the classic end-to-side neurorrhaphy and suturing the proximal nerve stump to a donor nerve in a rat model of a severed median nerve. METHODS: Three experimental groups were studied: a modified end-to-side neurorrhaphy with suturing of the proximal nerve stump (double end-to-side neurorrhaphy, Group I), a classic end-to-side neurorrhaphy (Group II) and a control group without neurorrhaphy (Group III). Twenty weeks after surgery, grasping testing, muscle contractility testing, and histological studies were performed. RESULTS: The grasping strength, muscle contraction force and nerve fiber count were significantly higher in group I than in group II, and there was no evidence of nerve recovery in group III. CONCLUSIONS: The contribution from the proximal nerve stump in double end-to-side nerve repair might improve axonal sprouting from the donor nerve and help achieve a better functional recovery in an end-to-side coaptation model.
 
            
