Ultrastructural evidence of repair and neuronal survival after labyrinthectomy in the squirrel monkey.
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Although the vestibular and cochlear branches of the VIIIth cranial nerve originate embryologically from the same primordia, results of the present investigation confirm previous findings indicating that the vestibular branch may be more plastic with respect to recovery after surgical insult than the cochlear division. In this report we show ultrastructural details of changes undergone by the vestibular nerve after surgery. Dendrites peripheral to the vestibular nerve ganglion (VNG) were severed by surgically removing the vestibular end organs; the squirrel monkeys were then allowed to recuperate, and tested for their vestibulospinal and vestibulo-oculomotor functions behaviorally. However, behavior deficits resulting from the injury are reported separately. The vestibular nerves excised from the internal acoustic meatus and the temporal bones were examined histologically for changes of VNG and fibers from day 1 to 1,247 days after labyrinthectomy. Light- and electron-microscopic examinations indicated that some perikarya and some fibers of the VNG remained in the ganglionic matrix for up to 1,247 days, the longest period studied, after the operation. Fibers extended toward the remodeled inner ear space in the absence of appropriate sensory cell targets. The surviving neurons and fibers exhibited various degrees of wallerian-like degeneration at first, but many of them retained ultracellular organelles and integrity even after 1,247 days. Since vestibular perikarya are bipolar, the unsevered fibers that project to the brainstem could retain functional synaptic connections, a possibility that is now under investigation. Schwann cells in the ganglionic matrix may also have contributed to vestibular neuron survival by providing the proper nourishment. Morphometric measurements determined that neurons remaining in the ganglion had significantly smaller cross-sectional areas than normal neurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)