Journal article

Muscle cells become necrotic rather than apoptotic during reperfusion of ischaemic skeletal muscle

KR Knight, A Messina, JV Hurley, B Zhang, WA Morrison, AG Stewart

International Journal of Experimental Pathology | WILEY | Published : 1999

Abstract

While necrosis is known as a major mechanism for the loss of viability of skeletal muscle following ischaemia and reperfusion, much less is known of the role of apoptosis. In this study rat hind limbs were subjected to 2h of tourniquet ischaemia, then reperfused for either 0, 0.25, 0.5, 1, 3, 8, 16 or 24 h (n = 6 per group). Mean viability of muscle, assessed by tetrazolium dye reduction, after 2h ischaemia and 2h reperfusion was 17%. Histological examination revealed disrupted, necrotic muscle fibers from 30 min to 24 h reperfusion. Apoptotic nuclei were identified by haematoxylin staining and TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase mediated dUTP nick end labelling. No TUNEL-positive c..

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