Journal article

Engineering a multimodal nerve conduit for repair of injured peripheral nerve

AF Quigley, KJ Bulluss, ILB Kyratzis, K Gilmore, T Mysore, KSU Schirmer, EL Kennedy, M O'Shea, YB Truong, SL Edwards, G Peeters, P Herwig, JM Razal, TE Campbell, KN Lowes, MJ Higgins, SE Moulton, MA Murphy, MJ Cook, GM Clark Show all

Journal of Neural Engineering | Published : 2013

Abstract

Injury to nerve tissue in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) results in long-term impairment of limb function, dysaesthesia and pain, often with associated psychological effects. Whilst minor injuries can be left to regenerate without intervention and short gaps up to 2 cm can be sutured, larger or more severe injuries commonly require autogenous nerve grafts harvested from elsewhere in the body (usually sensory nerves). Functional recovery is often suboptimal and associated with loss of sensation from the tissue innervated by the harvested nerve. The challenges that persist with nerve repair have resulted in development of nerve guides or conduits from non-neural biological tissues and var..

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Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge funding provided by the Victorian Government Science, Technology and Innovation program, the National Health and Medical Research Council (Project 635243, the Australian Research Council (CE0561616) and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization. The authors would also like to thank Roberto and Luana de Ioris for their support of this work.