AI Article Synopsis

  • Research has shown that the brain undergoes changes in its structure after peripheral nerve injuries, but the specific anatomical changes haven't been fully studied yet.
  • The study utilized advanced imaging techniques to analyze the dendritic structures of neurons in the brains of adult primates who experienced denervation of their hand.
  • Results revealed significant changes in the dendritic patterns of certain neurons in area 3b, suggesting that nerve injury allows previously inactive neural connections to become more prominent in the reorganized cortical regions.

Article Abstract

Background: Topographic reorganization of central maps following peripheral nerve injury has been well characterized. Despite extensive documentation of these physiological changes, the underlying anatomical correlates have yet to be fully explored. In this study, we used Golgi impregnation and light microscopy to assess dendritic morphology following denervation of the glabrous hand surface in adult primates.

Results: After survival durations that permit complete physiologically-defined reorganization, we find a systematic change in the dendritic arborization pattern of both layer II/III pyramidal and layer IV spiny stellate cells in the contralateral hand region of area 3b, compared to unaffected cortical areas. In general, our analyses indicate a progressive expansion of distal regions of the dendritic arbor with no appreciable changes proximally. This pattern of distal dendritic elaboration occurs for both basilar and apical dendrites.

Conclusions: These observations are consistent with the notion that latent inputs gain expression in reorganized cortex after nerve injury via their influence through contacts with more distally located termination sites.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC529444PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-5-43DOI Listing

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