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Publication details
Regeneration of tactile lamellar corpuscles of the rat after postnatal freeze injury
Authors | |
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Year of publication | 1997 |
Type | Article in Periodical |
Magazine / Source | Anatomy and Embryology |
MU Faculty or unit | |
Citation | |
Field | Morphological specializations and cytology |
Keywords | Denervated skin; Development; Digital corpuscles; Freeze injury; Innervated skin; Regeneration |
Description | Tactile lamellar corpuscles were studied after freeze injury of rat toe pads under normal conditions and following permanent denervation in 1- to 65-day-old animals. In the innervated skin, digital corpuscles redifferentiated in all age groups examined during development and maturation. Characteristic of the reinnervated skin was a great diversity in the shape and size of newly formed corpuscles. Small corpuscles with only 1-3 lamellae around their terminals and well-developed corpuscles of about normal size with up to 15 lamellae were sometimes found within the same sample of skin. The regenerated corpuscles were reduced in number; they reappeared in only 50% of dermal papillae in the toe pads after freeze injury in 7-week-old rats, compared with approximately 100% of dermal papillae that contained lamellar corpuscles in normal toe-pad skin. In denervated toes, occasional corpuscular lamellar structures appeared first after freeze injury applied to 34-day-old rats. In the toe pads denervated and injured by freezing in 42- and 49-day-old rats, lamellar structures redifferentiated in about 10% of the papillae, and in 23.5% after freeze injury applied to 2-month-old rats. Unsatisfactory preservation of basal laminae at the former sites of the corpuscles and in the acellular peripheral nerve stumps, and/or insufficient migration of Schwann cells, may be responsible for the absence or abortive regeneration of lamellar structures in denervated skin of food pads after freeze injury in young rats. |
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