WALLERIAN DEGENERATION AND REGENERATION PRESENTED BY: DR. LAKSHMI PAVANI P. ( pt )
CONTENTS INTRODUCTION CLASSIFICATION OF NERVE INJURIES INJURY OF THE NERVE CELL BODY INJURY OF THE NERVE CELL PROCESS CHANGES IN THE DISTAL SEGMENT OF THE AXON CHANGES IN THE PROXIMAL SEGMENT OF THE AXON CHANGES IN THE NERVE CELL BODY RECOVERY OF THE NEURONS FOLLOWING INJURY REGENERATION OF AXONS IN THE PERIPHERAL NERVES REGENERATION OF AXONS IN THE CNS WALLERIAN DEGENERATION REGENERATION
INTRODUCTION Neuron is the basic functional unit of the nervous system. In the mature human, if it is destroyed, it is not replaced. It may be injured due to various reasons(cutting, crushing, pull & pressure). These injuries may damage a nerve variously & the injury is classified according to the extent of the damage.
SEDDON’S CLASSIFICATION OF NERVE INJURY Seddon (1944) described 3 clinical types of nerve injury: Neurapraxia (class I) The term applied to a transient block Paralysis is incomplete, recovery is rapid & complete, & there is no nerve degeneration Pressure is the most common cause
Axonotmesis (class II) T he term applied to a nerve lesion in which the axons are damaged but the surrounding connective tissue sheaths remain intact Wallerian degeneration occurs peripherally Functional recovery is more rapid & more complete than after complete section of the nerve trunk Crush injuries, traction, & compression are the most common causes
Neurotmesis (class III) The term applied to complete section of the nerve trunk Occur on severe contusion, stretch, laceration Surgical repair is required.
SUNDERLAND’S CLASSIFICATION Sunderland (1951) expanded seddon’s classification to 5 degrees: First-degree (class I) : seddon’s neurapraxia & first-degree are the same Second-degree (class II) : seddon’s axonotmesis & second-degree are the same Third-degree (class II): Nerve fiber interruption There is a lesion of the endoneurium , but the epineurium & perineurium remain intact Recovery from a third-degree injury is possible, but surgical intervention may be required
Fourth-degree (class II): Only the epineurium remain intact Surgical repair is required Fifth-degree (class III): seddon’s neurotmesis Lesion of complete transection of the nerve Recovery is not possible without an appropriate surgical treatment
INJURY OF THE NERVE CELL BODY Severe damage of the nerve cell body may result in degeneration of the entire neuron. In the CNS, the tissue macrophages (microglial cells) remove the debris, & the neighboring astrocytes replace the neuron with scar tissue In the PNS, the tissue macrophages remove the debris, & the local fibroblasts replace the neuron with scar tissue
INJURY OF THE NERVE CELL PROCESS If the axon of the nerve cell is divided, degenerative changes will take place in Distal segment of the axon A portion of the axon proximal to the injury The cell body from which the axon arises
CHANGES IN THE DISTAL SEGMENT OF THE AXON Wallerian degeneration is the changes that occur distally to the site of damage on an axon Axon becomes swollen & irregular; the axon is broken into fragments, & the debris is digested by surrounding schwann cells & tissue macrophages Entire axon is destroyed within a week Myelin sheath is converted into lipid droplets The droplets are extruded from the schwann cell & subsequently are phagocytosed by tissue macrophages
Schwann cells now begin to proliferate rapidly & axonal sprouts grow from the proximal stump, enter the distal stump, & grow toward the nerve's end-organs I f regeneration does not occur, the axon & the Schwann cells are replaced by fibrous tissue produced by local fibroblasts
CHANGES IN THE PROXIMAL SEGMENT OF THE AXON The changes in the proximal segment of the axon are similar to those that take place in the distal segment but extend only proximally above the lesion as far as the first node of ranvier
CHANGES IN THE NERVE CELL BODY The changes that occur in the cell body following injury to its axon are referred to as retrograde degeneration The nissil material becomes fine, granular, & dispersed throughout the cytoplasm ( chromatolysis ) The nucleus moves toward the periphery of the cell, & the cell body swells & becomes rounded Synaptic terminals are replaced by schwann cells in the PNS & microglial cells or astrocytes in the CNS
RECOVERY OF NEURONS FOLLOWING INJURY The recovery of the nerve cell body & regeneration of its processes may take several months. RNA & protein synthesis is accelerated A reconstitution of the original nissil structure A decrease in the swelling of the cell body A return of nucleus to its characteristic central position
REGENERATION OF AXONS IN PERIPHERAL NERVES Depend on endoneurial tubes & possessed by schwann cells The following mechanisms are involved: The axons are attracted by chemotropic factors secreted by the schwann cells in the distal stump. Growth-stimulating factors exist within the distal stump, & Inhibitory factors are present in the perineurium to inhibit the axons from leaving the nerve
REGENERATION OF AXONS IN THE CNS Central axons may not be as good at regeneration as peripheral axons The regeneration process is aborted by: Failure of oligodendrocytes to serve in the same manner as schwann cells Laying down of scar tissue by the active astrocytes Absence of nerve growth factors in the CNS Neuroglial cells may produce nerve growth-inhibiting factors
REFERENCES Clinical neuroanatomy , 7/E snell Essentials of medical physiology, 3/E mahapatra Principles of neural science, 5/E kandel ER, schwartz JH, jessell TM (editors)