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Axonal Branching and Recovery of Coordinated Muscle Activity After Transsection of the Facial Nerve in Adult Rats

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Axonal Branching and Recovery of Coordinated Muscle Activity After Transsection of the Facial Nerve in Adult Rats - Angelov, Doychin N, and Guntinas-Lichius, Orlando, and Wewetzer, Konstantin
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Facial nerve surgery inevitably leads to partial pareses, abnormally associated movements and pathologically altered reflexes. The reason for this "post-paralytic syndrome" is the misdirected reinnervation of targets, which consists of two major components. First, due to malfunctioning axonal guidance, a muscle gets reinnervated by a "foreign" axon, that has been misrouted along a "wrong" fascicle. Second, the supernumerary collateral branches emerging from all transected axons simultaneously innervate antagonistic muscles ...

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