A comparative histologic survey was conducted on the dorsal root, sciatic, tibial and medial plantar nerves of 90-and 110-week-old B6C3F1 female mice reared in either solid-floor cages covered in sawdust or wire-mesh-floor cages. Age-related peripheral nerve lesions, characterized by axonal degeneration and remyelination, were present in all nerves surveyed, and were especially prominent in the sciatic and medial plantar nerves at 110 weeks of age but, there were no differences associated with the type of cage floor in clinical signs, grasping power of the fore-and hind-limbs, motor nerve conduction velocity or histopathologic findings at these ages. Key words: cage floor, mice, peripheral nerves, pressure neuropathy in mice [5,8]. There is marked variation between CD-1 and B6C3F1 strains in the incidence of the spontaneous peripheral neuropathy, suggesting increased susceptibility to B6C3F1 strain [5]. In this study, a histologic survey was conducted on the dorsal root, sciatic, tibial and plantar nerves of 90-and 110-week-old B6C3F1 female mice housed in either plastic cages or wiremesh-floor cages to attempt to delineate the clinical and functional disorders which compose this peripheral neuropathy.Eighty 6-week-old female B6C3F1 mice were purchased from Charles River Japan (Kanagawa, Japan) and housed inside a barriered rodent facility. Groups of five were first maintained in plastic cages (22 L × 38 W × 20 H cm) with solid floors covered by a deep (Received 22 September 1999 / Accepted 18 February 2000 Address corresponding: H. Tabata, Safety Research Laboratories , Yamanouchi Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd,[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8] Japan Neuropathy is a spontaneous complication which often arises during aging. Localized peripheral nerve lesions, including demyelination, Wallerian degeneration and Renaut bodies, are reported to arise in the hindfeet of rats as a result of living in cages with wiregrate flooring [6,12]. Mizisin et al. [6] demonstrated that wire grates rapidly induce hindpaw tactile hyperesthesia and plantar neuropathy in rats, which could complicate or invalidate studies which assess hindlimb function and structure. This effect is not limited to rats; pressure neuropathy also arises in the plantar nerves of guinea pigs kept in cages with wire mesh floors [1,10]. Although spontaneous, age-related, peripheral neuropathy has been studied extensively in rats [2-4, 7, 11], there are few reports concerning this phenomenon