Prolonged cold-preservation of nerve allografts

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Abstract

The goal of this study was to determine the effect of varying durations of cold-preservation on the immunogenicity of nerve allografts and their subsequent ability to facilitate neuroregeneration across a short nerve gap. Allograts preserved for 1, 4, and 7 weeks were compared to untreated allografts and isografts. There was a shift from an interferon-γ-producing cellular response (untreated allografts) to an absence of response (7-week cold-preserved allografts and isografts). There were no detectable alloantibodies by flow cytometry. Histomorphometry distal to the graft showed robust regeneration in the isograft and 7-week cold-preserved groups when compared to the untreated allograft group. Increasing duration of cold-preservation diminished the cellular immune response. This cold-preservation does not preclude subsequent nerve regeneration across a short nerve graft. Prolonged cold-preservation of nerve allograft tissue could serve as a means to produce unlimited graft material for use in peripheral nerve reconstruction.

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APA

Fox, I. K., Jaramillo, A., Hunter, D. A., Rickman, S. R., Mohanakumar, T., & Mackinnon, S. E. (2005). Prolonged cold-preservation of nerve allografts. Muscle and Nerve, 31(1), 59–69. https://doi.org/10.1002/mus.20231

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