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lüll Age-related changes in vagal afferents innervating the gastrointestinal tract Phillips RJ; Walter GC; Powley TLAuton Neurosci 2010[Feb]; 153 (1-2): 90-8Recent progress in understanding visceral afferents, some of it reviewed in the present issue, serves to underscore how little is known about the aging of the visceral afferents in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. In spite of the clinical importance of the issue-with age, GI function often becomes severely compromised-only a few initial observations on age-related structural changes of visceral afferents are available. Primary afferent cell bodies in both the nodose ganglia and dorsal root ganglia lose Nissl material and accumulate lipofucsin, inclusions, aggregates, and tangles. Additionally, in changes that we focus on in the present review, vagal visceral afferent terminals in both the muscle wall and the mucosa of the GI tract exhibit age-related structural changes. In aged animals, both of the vagal terminal types examined, namely intraganglionic laminar endings and villus afferents, exhibit dystrophic or regressive morphological changes. These neuropathies are associated with age-related changes in the structural integrity of the target organs of the affected afferents, suggesting that local changes in trophic environment may give rise to the aging of GI innervation. Given the clinical relevance of GI tract aging, a more complete understanding both of how aging alters the innervation of the gut and of how such changes might be mitigated should be made research priorities.|Aging/*physiology[MESH]|Animals[MESH]|Gastrointestinal Tract/*innervation[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Nerve Endings/physiology[MESH]|Sensory Receptor Cells/metabolism[MESH]|Vagus Nerve/anatomy & histology/*physiology[MESH]|Visceral Afferents/anatomy & histology/*physiology[MESH] |