Immunohistochemical evidence for sympathetic denervation and reinnervation after necrotic injury in rat myocardium.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
To study the short and long term effects of myocardial injury on sympathetic nerve fibers, a necrotizing lesion was performed on the diaphragmatic side of rat myocardium by freeze-thawing. Animals were sacrificed at 2, 6, 18, 28 and 105 days after the surgical procedure and paraffin-embedded hearts were subjected to peroxidase immunohistochemistry. According to previous studies cardiac nerves were visualized by staining their surrounding Schwann cells with an anti-S100 protein antibody. Catecholaminergic axons were specifically identified by an anti-tyrosine hydroxylase antibody. No S-100 positive structures were found in 2-day lesions (denervation). Starting from day 6,S-100 positive structures became progressively more evident (reinnervation) and persisted up to day 105. Many of these newly formed nerve fibers were positive for tyrosine hydroxylase, indicating that a necrotic injury of rat myocardium causes a disappearance of sympathetic innervation which is followed by a phase of sympathetic reinnervation.