Publication | Closed Access
Ephaptic transmission in chronically damaged peripheral nerves
239
Citations
0
References
1979
Year
Spinal Cord InjuryPeripheral Nerve InjuryNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyArtificial SynapseMedicineEphaptic InteractionEphaptic TransmissionSciatic NerveNeurologyNeuroscienceElectrophysiologyCentral Nervous SystemPeripheral NervesNervous SystemPeripheral NervePeripheral Nervous SystemSocial Sciences
Several weeks after damage of the sciatic nerve in adult rats, a stable electrical (ephaptic) interaction forms between pairs of injured sensory and motor axons. Fiber-fiber interaction occurs when the nerve ends in a neuroma, after end-to-end nerve suture and after nerve crush injury. Unlike the transient "artificial synapse" created acutely on section of a nerve, this form of crosstalk is long-lasting. Its existence lends support to the hypothesis that ephaptic interaction is an important factor in neurologic pathophysiology.