Abstract
Background
Minimally-invasive ablation with radio frequency (RF) and cryoablation have been widely adopted to treat conditions with aberrant neural activity such as excessive mucus production in rhinitis, but neurological and inflammatory effects on treated tissues are poorly understood.
Objective
To gain an understanding of the physiological changes caused by nerve ablation using RF and cryoablation devices.
Methods
Using clinical devices for rhinitis treatment that ablate nerves with access from the nasal cavity, we applied temperature-controlled RF and cryoablation to rat sciatic nerves. To model the ablation through mucosal tissue similarly to the rhinitis procedure, RF ablation and cryoablation were applied through a layer of muscle.
Results
Both ablation techniques induced acute and sustained neurodegeneration visualized with histological sections at two days and one month after treatment. After both treatments, rats showed a change in muscle tone, but small increases in sensitivity measured by a von Frey test were only observed 2 days after cryoablation and one month after the RF ablation. Both treatments caused reductions in nerve conduction velocity at one month after treatment. Inflammation in treated nerves and surrounding tissues that persisted to one month.
Conclusions
The two neurolytic devices used in the clinic work similarly by axonal disintegration and which leads to disruption of electrical signals. The data suggest that these methods are effective methods of nerve ablation that could be used to treat diseases related to elevated neuron activity such as rhinitis.
Keywords
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Supplementary Material
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