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-   -   Transneuronal Degeneration. (https://www.neurotalk.org/parkinson-s-disease/32491-transneuronal-degeneration.html)

Megan 11-19-2007 11:51 PM

Transneuronal Degeneration.
 
I posted this thread on the PN board however on reflection wonder whether someone on this board may be more familiar with this term!

Has anyone heard the term Transneuronal Degeneration or Transneuronal Atrophy? If so, what has it been related to in terms of disease process?

I can't find much information about this apart from injury induced Transneuronal Atrophy and that is not what I am looking for.

Any clues or profound thoughts?

Heidi L 11-20-2007 12:56 PM

Transneuronal degeneration: atrophy of certain neurons after interruption of afferent axons or the death of other neurons to which they send their efferent output.

Basically means that the death of one neuron causes atrophy or death in the the neurons in it's forward path of connection (the neurons it stimulates). A neuron's metabolism is regulated by the amount of stimulation it gets, if no stimulus is received, it degenerates. Known colloquially as the Use it or Lose it mechanism.

I'm not sure which diseases that would include, probably a lot of them. But while out searching I found something thought was interesting in light of the progression of Lewy Bodies in PD:

The Vagus Nerve is One Route of Transneural Invasion for Intranasally Inoculated Influenza A Virus in Mice


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