Polyneural innervation in the psoas muscle of the developing rat

J Ijkema-Paassen*, A Gramsbergen

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    14 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Polyneural innervation was studied in the psoas muscle in developing rats from P4 till P25 and at adult age, with the combined silver-acetylcholinesterase technique. Nerve endings were counted, and endplates were measured. These data were compared with such data in the human. The end of polyneural innervation in the rat (around P20) and in the human (around 12 weeks postterm age) in both cases coincides with a transformation in motor behavior and postural control. The rat's psoas muscle at early stages is less heavily innervated than this muscle in the human. Up to three axons per motor end-plate were counted at P4, but in the human up to five axons at 25 weeks of post menstrual age. This difference might be related to the lower percentage of type I muscle fibers in the rat. (C) 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)1058-1063
    Number of pages6
    JournalMUSCLE & NERVE
    Volume21
    Issue number8
    Publication statusPublished - Aug-1998

    Keywords

    • polyneural innervation
    • rat
    • development
    • psoas muscle
    • fiber type distribution
    • SKELETAL-MUSCLE
    • NEUROMUSCULAR-JUNCTION
    • POSTNATAL-DEVELOPMENT
    • SYNAPSE ELIMINATION
    • SOLEUS MUSCLE
    • MYOFIBERS

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