Why Are Sensory Axons More Vulnerable for Ischemia than Motor Axons?
نویسندگان
چکیده
OBJECTIVE In common peripheral neuropathies, sensory symptoms usually prevail over motor symptoms. This predominance of sensory symptoms may result from higher sensitivity of sensory axons to ischemia. METHODS We measured median nerve compound sensory action potentials (CSAPs), compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs), and excitability indices in five healthy subjects during forearm ischemia lasting up to disappearance of both CSAPs and CMAPs. RESULTS ISCHEMIA INDUCED: (1) earlier disappearance of CSAPs than CMAPs (mean ± standard deviation 30±5 vs. 46±6 minutes), (2) initial changes compatible with axonal depolarization on excitability testing (decrease in threshold, increase in strength duration time constant (SDTC) and refractory period, and decrease in absolute superexcitability) which were all more prominent in sensory than in motor axons, and (3) a subsequent decrease of SDTC reflecting a decrease in persistent Na(+) conductance during continuing depolarisation. INTERPRETATION Our study shows that peripheral sensory axons are more vulnerable for ischemia than motor axons, with faster inexcitability during ischemia. Excitability studies during ischemia showed that this was associated with faster depolarization and faster persistent Na(+) channel inactivation in sensory than in motor axons. These findings might be attributed to differences in ion channel composition between sensory and motor axons and may contribute to the predominance of sensory over motor symptoms in common peripheral neuropathies.
منابع مشابه
The "waiting period" of sensory and motor axons in early chick hindlimb: its role in axon pathfinding and neuronal maturation.
During embryonic development motor axons in the chick hindlimb grow out slightly before sensory axons and wait in the plexus region at the base of the limb for approximately 24 hr before invading the limb itself (Tosney and Landmesser, 1985a). We have investigated the role of this waiting period by asking, Is the arrest of growth cones in the plexus region a general property of both sensory and...
متن کاملSensory and motor axons are different: implications for neurological disease
Axons are required to maintain specific discharge rates and patterns, and as a consequence, the ability to conduct an impulse with minimal expenditure of energy will create different needs for different axonal populations. There may be only one role for an axon, and that is to conduct an impulse securely from one end to the other, but it is to be expected that the biophysical properties of sens...
متن کاملNpn-1 Primes Limbs for Motion
During neural development, the axons of sensory and motor neurons must extend over long distances—meters in some animals—to reach the most distant parts of the limbs. The axons of these neurons adhere tightly together to form spinal nerves that project over these distances to their peripheral targets. This process, called fasciculation, controls axon outgrowth and guidance. However, the underly...
متن کاملMotor axons preferentially reinnervate motor pathways.
Motor axons regenerating after transection of mixed nerve preferentially reinnervate distal motor branches and/or muscle, a process termed "preferential motor reinnervation." Collaterals of a single motor axon often enter both sensory and motor Schwann cell tubes of the distal stump; specificity is generated by pruning collaterals from sensory pathways while maintaining those in motor pathways....
متن کاملDifferential protection of neuromuscular sensory and motor axons and their endings in Wld(S) mutant mice.
Orthograde Wallerian degeneration normally brings about fragmentation of peripheral nerve axons and their sensory or motor endings within 24-48 h in mice. However, neuronal expression of the chimaeric, Wld(S) gene mutation extends survival of functioning axons and their distal endings for up to 3 weeks after nerve section. Here we studied the pattern and rate of degeneration of sensory axons an...
متن کامل