The morphological characteristics of GABAergic neurons and the distribution of GABAergic synaptic terminals were examined in cultures of hippocampal neurons from 4-35 days in vitro. Neurons expressing GABA immunoreactivity represented about 6% of the total number of cultured neurons at all time points. Although the morphological characteristics of GABAergic cells suggested a heterogeneous population, GABAergic cells as a class were notably different from the non-GABAergic, presumably pyramidal cells. Most GABAergic cells had more fusiform or polygonal shaped somata, non-spiny and less tapering dendrites and appeared more phase-dense than nonGABAergic cells. Quantitative analysis revealed that GABAergic cells had fewer primary dendrites, more elongated dendritic arbors, and longer dendritic segments than non-GABAergic neurons-characteristics that are similar to GABAergic cells in situ. Double immunostaining revealed that GAD65-positive varicosities were also immunopositive for synapsin I, suggesting that GAD65-positive varicosities that contacted somata and dendrites represented presynaptic specializations. Confocal microscopy revealed the proportion of the synaptic specializations on the cell soma that were GAD65-positive was greater than on the dendrites, suggesting that somata and dendrites differ in their ability to induce the formation of presynaptic specializations by GABAergic axons. These data indicate that the GABAergic cells that develop in culture exhibit distinctive morphological characteristics and participate in different synaptic interactions that nonGABA cells. Thus many of the features that distinguish GABAergic neurons in culture are reminiscent of the characteristics that distinguish GABAergic neurons in situ.
Multiple fixation techniques have been developed for distal interphalangeal (DIP) joint arthrodesis. Delayed and nonunion rates varying from 0% to 20% have been reported. The senior author has refined a technique for DIP joint arthrodesis by using an intramedullary Kirschner wire and an interosseous wire for fusion of the DIP joint and interphalangeal (IP) joint of the thumb. In 24 joint arthrodeses in 19 patients, the nonunion rate was 4%, and the minor complication rate was 12%. The advantages of this technique include the absence of protruding hardware that would necessitate removal; consistency in achieving osteosynthesis, with a low nonunion rate; and technical simplicity.
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