Is the knife-cut in the hypothalamus a permanent barrier to regrowth of nerve fibers?
The regenerative capacity of nerve fibers was studied in adult female rats. Horseradish peroxidase was injected into the anterior hypothalamus lateral to the suprachiasmatic nucleus 4 days, 6 weeks and 4 months, respectively, following an archiform retrochiasmatic knife-cut. The trajectory of the stained fibers was examined on horizontal sections of the hypothalamus. No nerve fibers could be seen sprouting across the scar-tissue of the knife-cut regardless of the survival time. In one rat (6-week survival time) a bundle of fine nerve fibers turned in a medial direction at the caudal end of the knife-cut, suggesting that sprouting fibers were destined to reinnervate parts of the deafferented medial-basal hypothalamus.