Effect of modified formula radix hedysari on the amplification effect during peripheral nerve regeneration

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Abstract

Many studies have demonstrated a compensatory amplification phenomenon during nerve regeneration. When a relatively fine nerve is used as a donor to connect to a distal nerve after transection, the donor nerve regenerates more collaterals than its own fibers, which extend to the distal stump, grow into distal endoneurial tubes, and finally reach and dominate the target organs. This is known as the amplification phenomenon. In this study, we investigated the amplification phenomenon in rats treated with Modified Formula Radix Hedysari (MFRH) as adjuvant therapy for 12 weeks. The rats were divided into three groups at random (six animals in each group). In the model group and the treatment group, the proximal common peroneal nerve was used as a donor nerve to connect to the distal tibial nerve. Rats in the normal group did not undergo surgery. After surgery, the treatment group was administered MFRH as systemic therapy, while the model group and the normal group were not given treatment. The results demonstrated that the nerve conduction velocity, the fiber diameter, the axon diameter, the number of regenerating nerve fibers, and the amplification ratio were better in the treatment group than in the model group, suggesting that MFRH promoted the nerve amplification effect. © 2013 Zhi Yong Wang et al.

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Wang, Z. Y., Zhang, P. X., Han, N., Kou, Y. H., Yin, X. F., & Jiang, B. G. (2013). Effect of modified formula radix hedysari on the amplification effect during peripheral nerve regeneration. Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/647982

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