Subscribe to 51精品视频wire Today
Get the most interesting and important stories from the 51精品视频.Researchers Regrow Damaged Nerves with Polymer and Protein
聽researchers have created a biodegradable nerve guide鈥攁 polymer tube鈥攆illed with a growth-promoting protein that can regenerate long sections of damaged nerves聽without the need for transplanting stem cells or a donor nerve.听
So far, the technology has been tested in monkeys, and the results of those experiments appeared Jan. 22 in聽.听
鈥淲e鈥檙e the first to show a nerve guide without any cells was able to bridge a large, two-inch gap between the nerve stump and its target muscle,鈥澛爏aid senior author聽聽professor of plastic surgery at 51精品视频 and core faculty at the聽. 鈥淥ur guide was聽comparable to, and in some ways better than, a nerve graft.鈥
According to a U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research , half of wounded American soldiers return home with injuries to their arms and legs. The injuries often result in聽damaged nerves and disability, according to research published in . Among civilians, car crashes, machinery accidents, cancer treatment, diabetes and even birth trauma can cause significant nerve damage, affecting more than聽聽altogether, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Strokes reported.
Peripheral nerves can regrow up to a third of an inch on their own, but if the damaged section is longer than that, the nerve can鈥檛 find its target. Often, the disoriented nerve gets knotted into a painful ball called a neuroma.
The most common treatment for longer segments of nerve damage is to remove a skinny sensory nerve at the back of the leg鈥攚hich causes numbness in the leg and other complications, but has the least chance of being missed by the injured person鈥攃hop it into thirds, bundle the pieces together and then sew them to the end of the damaged motor nerve, usually in the arm. But only about聽聽of the motor function typically returns.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like you鈥檙e replacing a piece of linguine with a bundle of angel hair pasta,鈥 Marra said. 鈥淚t just doesn鈥檛 work as well.鈥澛
Marra鈥檚 nerve guide returned about 80% of fine motor control in the thumbs of four monkeys, each with a two-inch nerve gap in the forearm.听
The guide is made of the same material as dissolvable sutures and peppered with a growth-promoting protein鈥攖he same one delivered to the brain in a聽, results of which were published in the journal Brain鈥攚hich releases slowly over the course of months.
The experiment had two controls: an empty polymer tube and a nerve graft. Since monkeys鈥 legs are relatively short, the usual clinical procedure of removing and dicing a leg nerve wouldn鈥檛 work. So, the scientists removed a two-inch segment of nerve from the forearm, flipped it around and sewed it into place, replacing metaphorical linguine with linguine, and setting a high bar for the nerve guide to match.
Functional recovery was just as good with Marra鈥檚 guide as it was with this best-case-scenario graft, and the guide outperformed the graft when it came to restoring nerve conduction and replenishing Schwann cells鈥攖he insulating layer around nerves that boosts electrical signals and supports regeneration. In both scenarios, it took a year for the nerve to regrow. The empty guide performed significantly worse all around.听
With these promising results in monkeys, Marra wants to bring her nerve guide to human patients. She鈥檚 working with the聽聽(FDA) on a first-in-human clinical trial and spinning out a startup company,聽
鈥淭here are no hollow tubes on the market that are approved by the FDA for nerve gaps greater than an inch. Once you get past that, no off-the-shelf tube has been shown to work,鈥 Marra said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what鈥檚 amazing here.鈥
Additional authors on the study include Neil Fadia; Jacqueline Bliley; Gabriella DiBernardo; Donald Crammond, PhD; Benjamin Schilling; Wesley Sivak, MD, PhD;聽Alexander Spiess, MD; Kia Washington, MD; Matthias Waldner, MD; Liao Han Tsung, PhD; Isaac James, MD; Danielle Minteer, PhD;聽Casey Tompkins-Rhoades;聽Deok-Yeol Kim;聽Riccardo Schweizer, MD;聽Debra Bourne, MD; Adam Cottrill, George Panagis, Asher Schusterman, MD; Francesco Egro, MD;聽Insiyah Campwala; Tyler Simpson, MS; Douglas Weber, PhD; Trent Gause, MD; Jack Brooker;聽Tvisha Josyula; Astrid Guevara; Alexander Repko and Christopher Mahoney, all of 51精品视频.
This study was funded by the聽聽(award number W81XWH-14-2-0003).听, supplied the聽growth-promoting protein. Axomax Technologies was formed after the experiments were completed.听聽