The neuronal regulation of fracture healing: Effects of sciatic nerve resection in rat tibia

Authors

  • Lars Nordsletten
  • Jan Erik Madsen
  • Runar Almaas
  • Terje Rootwelt
  • Johan Halse
  • Yrjö T Konttinen
  • Mika Hukkanen
  • Seppo Santavirta

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679408995457

Abstract

The effect of sciatic nerve resection on tibial fracture healing was studied in rats 25 days post-trauma. To prevent differences in loading between sham-operated and nerve-resected animals the fractured limbs were cast-immobilized. On radiograms 8 of 11 fractures in the sham-operated animals showed very little callus formation in contrast to only 1 of 8 fractures in the group with nerve resection. Measured by single-photon absorptiometry, animals with sciatic nerve resection had a higher bone mineral content than the sham-operated animals. However, the mechanical strength in three-point cantilever bending was not better in the nerve-resected rats, implying a defective organization of the large callus. These results suggest neural regulation plays a role in the type of fracture healing, primary or secondary, and in the amount and quality of the callus.

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Published

1994-01-01

How to Cite

Nordsletten, L., Madsen, J. E., Almaas, R., Rootwelt, T., Halse, J., Konttinen, Y. T., … Santavirta, S. (1994). The neuronal regulation of fracture healing: Effects of sciatic nerve resection in rat tibia. Acta Orthopaedica, 65(3), 299–304. https://doi.org/10.3109/17453679408995457