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  • Fastigial nucleus  (2)
  • Cerebellar function  (1)
  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 19 (1974), S. 61-77 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Fastigial nucleus ; Cutaneous mechanoreceptors ; Excitation ; Inhibition
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary This paper gives an account of the responses of cerebellar fastigial cells to various afferent inputs from ipsilateral forelimb or hindlimb. Most of the preparations (17 out of 25) have been decerebrate and unanesthetized. The remainder were under anesthesia — chloralose, pentothal or surital. The afferent inputs have been provided by stimulation of predominantly cutaneous limb nerves or by three types of mechanical stimulation: taps to foot pads; pressure on foot pads; air jets to hairy skin. Recording from single fastigial cells was extracellular by glass microelectrodes, and computer averaging techniques of spike responses were employed as described in previous papers. Identification of fastigial cells was simply from location in the large fastigial nucleus, this location being later confirmed by identification of microelectrode tracks in histological sections. Fastigial cells display a fairly steady background discharge, the mean being 37 Hz for the decerebrate and considerably lower for the anesthetized. Pad taps usually evoked a diphasic (excitatory-inhibitory) response, but in some cases the inhibitory was dominant, in others the excitatory. The threshold was below 0.2 mm, and several fastigial cells were excited or inhibited by taps of only 0.01 mm. Air jet stimulation of hairy skin of the foot evoked similar responses. Durations of excitation were usually about 10 msec but inhibition was longer, usually about 50 msec. Nerve stimulation evoked responses of comparable type, but the latency was at least 4 msec shorter, corresponding to the more direct and shorter pathways from the site of stimulation. With some fastigial cells steady pressure to central foot pads of 2 sec duration evoked only brief phasic responses (excitatory or inhibitory) at ‘on’ and ‘off’. With other cells there were tonic responses — excitation or inhibition or admixtures thereof — for the whole duration of the pressure. Usually 500 g was almost maximally effective, and the threshold was always below 100 g. In an indeterminate type of response (the semitonic) the excitation or inhibition at ‘on’ persisted for up to 500 msec, an effect matching the response of the rapidly adapting receptors of the pads. With repetitive stimulation both the excitatory and inhibitory responses to pad taps were reduced with frequencies above 1 Hz and greatly depressed at 5 to 7 Hz. However a small inhibition was observed to persist during tap frequencies as high as 65 Hz. In a preliminary study both the background and the evoked responses of fastigial cells were found to be very sensitive to barbiturate anesthesia.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 19 (1974), S. 100-118 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellar nuclei ; Fastigial neurones ; Somatotopy ; Cerebellar function
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The somatotopic inputs into fastigial cells have been studied in relation to cutaneous mechanoreceptors of forelimb and hindlimb. Some fastigial cells were very discriminative, not only in respect of the limb, but also to restricted areas of hairy skin and related toe pads. Others were much less so, forelimb and hindlimb cutaneous receptors evoking similar excitatory-inhibitory responses. In addition, from the contralateral hindlimb, responses were evoked which were comparable with those from the ipsilateral limb. Somatotopic diagrams have been constructed which show in four experiments the sites of fastigial cells in the parasagittal plane of the microelectrode tracks. For each experiment four separate plottings give a comparison of the sizes of responses evoked for forelimb and hindlimb: excitation from nerve volleys; inhibition from nerve volleys; excitation from pad taps; inhibition from pad taps. In this way it is shown that fastigial cells with similar somatotopic relations often occur in clusters, particularly when assessed by their inhibitory responses. Since fastigial inhibition is largely due to Purkyně cells, there is an attempt to correlate the somatotopic relations of Purkyně cells with the somatotopy of fastigial cell inhibition. The excitation of fastigial cells exhibits less somatotopic discrimination, which conforms with the poor somatotopic discrimination of cells of the lateral reticular nucleus. In a final discussion there is consideration of two principal projections from the vermis of the anterior lobe: Purkyně cells inhibiting Deiters neur; Purkyně cells inhibiting fastigial cells which in turn monosynaptically excite Deiters neurones, the inhibition of Deiters neurones being then by disfacilitation. The degree of forelimb-hindlimb convergence in these pathways is reconsidered and is diagrammatically illustrated.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 19 (1974), S. 78-99 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Fastigial nucleus ; Lateral reticular nucleus ; Inferior olive ; Neuronal computation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A detailed study of the latencies of the excitatory responses of fastigial cells disclosed an unexpected anomaly. Except for infrequent small responses the latency was many milliseconds longer than would be expected for excitation by axon collaterals of the fast spino-cerebellar pathways. There were many examples in which inhibition had an earlier onset than excitation; nevertheless the inhibitory latency was not so brief as to preclude its production by Purkyně cell discharge in response to the fast spino-cerebellar pathways. Histograms have been constructed for the latencies of the excitation and inhibition evoked in fastigial cells by four kinds of inputs: nerve volleys from forelimb and hindlimb; pad taps from forelimb and hindlimb. Electrical stimulation of the lateral reticular nucleus on the same side very effectively excited fastigial cells, usually with the latency expected for monosynaptic excitation. It was therefore postulated that with forelimb and hindlimb stimulation the dominant mode of excitation of fastigial cells was by excitatory collaterals from the spino-reticulo-cerebellar pathway. Stimulation of the contralateral inferior olive also was effective in evoking a short latency excitation of fastigial cells. It was therefore assumed that collaterals from the spino-olivo-cerebellar pathway provide an additional excitatory input to fastigial cells. A diagram was constructed in space-time coordinates graphically expressing the timing of the various excitatory and inhibitory pathways by which a hindlimb nerve stimulus acts on fastigial cells. An interesting design feature is thereby disclosed, namely that the dominant excitatory input to the fastigial cells via the slower spino-cerebellar paths is virtually synchronous with the inhibitory input from Purkyně cells discharging in response to the fast spino-cerebellar input. It is pointed out that the temporal pattern gives optimal conditions for the computer-like operation of the fastigial nucleus.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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