Analysis of the variation in low-level laser energy density on the crushed sciatic nerves of rats: a morphological, quantitative, and morphometric study

The objective of this study was to evaluate three energy densities of low-level laser therapy (LLLT, GaAlAs, 780  nm, 40 mW, 0.04 cm2) for the treatment of lesions to peripheral nerves using the sciatic nerve of rats injured via crushing model (15  kgf, 5.2 MPa). Thirty Wistar rats (♂, 200–250 g) were divided into five groups (n = 6): C—control, not injured, and irradiated; L0—injured nerve without irradiation; L4—injured nerve irradiated with LLLT 4 J/cm2 (0.16  J); L10—injured nerve irradiated with LLLT 10 J/cm2 (0.4  J); and L50—injured nerve irradiated with LLLT 50 J/cm2 (2  J). The animals were sacrificed 2 weeks after the injury via perfusion with glutaraldehyde (2.5%, 0.1 M sodium cacodylate buffer). The nerve tissue was embedded in historesin, cut (3 μm), mounted on slides, and stained (Sudan black and neutral red). The morphological and quantitative analysis (myelin and blood capillary densities) and morphometric parameters (maximum and minimum diameters of nerve fibers, axon diameter, G-ratio, myelin sheath thickness) were assessed using the ImageJ software. ANOVA (parametric) or Kruskal-Wallis (nonparametric) tests were used for the statistical analys is. Groups L0, L4, L10, and L50 exhibited diminished values of all the quantitative and morphometric parameters in comparison to the control group. The morphological, quantitative, and morphometric data revealed improvement after injury in groups L4, L10, and L50 (irradiated groups) c...
Source: Lasers in Medical Science - Category: Laser Surgery Source Type: research