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The proximal medial sural nerve biopsy model: a standardised and reproducible baseline clinical model for the translational evaluation of bioengineered nerve guides.

Authors :
Bozkurt A
van Neerven SG
Claeys KG
O'Dey DM
Sudhoff A
Brook GA
Sellhaus B
Schulz JB
Weis J
Pallua N
Source :
BioMed research international [Biomed Res Int] 2014; Vol. 2014, pp. 121452. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Jun 02.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Autologous nerve transplantation (ANT) is the clinical gold standard for the reconstruction of peripheral nerve defects. A large number of bioengineered nerve guides have been tested under laboratory conditions as an alternative to the ANT. The step from experimental studies to the implementation of the device in the clinical setting is often substantial and the outcome is unpredictable. This is mainly linked to the heterogeneity of clinical peripheral nerve injuries, which is very different from standardized animal studies. In search of a reproducible human model for the implantation of bioengineered nerve guides, we propose the reconstruction of sural nerve defects after routine nerve biopsy as a first or baseline study. Our concept uses the medial sural nerve of patients undergoing diagnostic nerve biopsy (≥ 2 cm). The biopsy-induced nerve gap was immediately reconstructed by implantation of the novel microstructured nerve guide, Neuromaix, as part of an ongoing first-in-human study. Here we present (i) a detailed list of inclusion and exclusion criteria, (ii) a detailed description of the surgical procedure, and (iii) a follow-up concept with multimodal sensory evaluation techniques. The proximal medial sural nerve biopsy model can serve as a preliminary nature of the injuries or baseline nerve lesion model. In a subsequent step, newly developed nerve guides could be tested in more unpredictable and challenging clinical peripheral nerve lesions (e.g., following trauma) which have reduced comparability due to the different nature of the injuries (e.g., site of injury and length of nerve gap).

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2314-6141
Volume :
2014
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BioMed research international
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25006574
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2014/121452