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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: [K+]0 Spinal cord ; Posterior articular nerve ; Knee joint ; Inflammation ; Pain ; Arthritis ; Nociception ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In 20 cats anaesthetized with alpha-chloralose and spinalized at the thoracolumbar junction we investigated the role of stimulation induced accumulation of extracellular potassium in the spinal cord in the processing of nociceptive discharges from the knee joint. For that we electrically stimulated the posterior articular nerve of the knee. We further performed innocuous and noxious stimulation of the knee and of other parts of the leg and studied the effect of an acute inflammation of the knee on [K+]0 in the spinal cord. Innocuous stimulation of the skin (brushing or touching) and innocuous movements in the knee joint all induced rises in [K+]0 which were maximal at recording depths of 1500 to 2200 μm below the surface of the cord dorsum. Peak increases were 0.4 mM for touching the leg and 1.7 mM during rhythmic flexion/ extension of the knee joint. Noxious stimulation of the skin, the paw, the tendon and noxious movements of the knee joint also produced rises in [K+]0, which were somewhat larger for the individual types of stimuli than those produced by innocuous intensities. Electrical stimulation of the posterior articular nerve induced rises in [K+]0 by up to 0.6 mM. Stimulus intensities sufficient to activate unmyelinated group IV fibers were only slightly effective in raising [K+]0 above the levels reached during stimulation of myelinated group II and III fibers. During development of an acute inflammation of the knee joint (induced by kaolin and carrageenan), increases in [K+]0 and associated field potentials became larger by about 25%. We assume that this reflects an increase in neuronal responses. In conclusion, changes in [K+]0 in the spinal cord are some-what larger during noxious stimulation than during innocuous stimulation. The absolute level reached depended more on the site and type of stimulation than on the actual stimulus intensity itself. Hence a critical role of spinal K+ accumulation for nociception is unlikely.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Cutaneous mechanoreceptors ; Mossy fibers ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary This paper gives an account of single mossy fiber responses when three types of mechanical stimulation are applied to the forefoot and hindfoot of the cat which is either decerebrate and unanesthetized or lightly anesthetized by pentothal or chloralose. The mechanical stimuli were applied either to footpads (brief pulses, taps, or longer square pulses or ramps) or to the hairy skin by air jets. Recording of single mossy fibers was extracellular by glass microelectrodes that were inserted into the granular layer of the cerebellar cortex or the subjacent white matter. As described in previous papers computer averaging techniques usually of 64 responses have been employed to enhance reliability. Taps evoked pure excitatory responses from many mossy fibers, which were usually brief high frequency bursts resembling those evoked by nerve volleys. Usually the threshold displacement was less than 0.2 mm and thresholds as low as 0.01 mm were observed. There were often considerable differences in the intensities of responses from different pads of the same foot. Successive pulses of mechanical stimulation evoked mossy fiber responses of diminished intensity. Longer mechanical stimuli with square or ramp onsets evoked various admixtures of phasic and tonic responses. Hair stimulation was often a very effective excitant, the receptive field for a single mossy fiber usually covering a considerable area of foot and leg. Taps and pressure to the pads were also effective in inhibiting the background discharge of some mossy fibers, and admixtures of excitatory and inhibitory actions were observed. The results are discussed in relationship to the discharges evoked in primary afferent fibers by cutaneous mechanoreceptor stimulation. They provide an intermediate stage of information between mechanoreceptor stimulation and the response of Purkyně cells as described in the next paper.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 101 (1994), S. 452-464 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Somatosensory thalamus ; Knee joint ; Nociception ; Bradykinin ; Capsaicin ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In order to gain insight into the representation of articular pain of the knee at the supraspinal level, recordings were made from lateral thalamic neurons receiving input from afferent fibres of the knee joint in chloralose-anaesthetized cats. Dorsoventral penetrations were made through the ventral posterior lateral nucleus (VPL) using high intensity electrical stimulation of the medial articular nerve (MAN), which contains a high proportion (80%) of Aδ and C afferent fibres. All recording sites were verified histologically. Close retrograde injections (300 μl over 6 s) into geniculate artery of KCl (2 × isotonic), bradykinin (BK, 2.6 or 26 μg) and capsaicin (200 μM) were used to test the response properties of thalamic neurons. Of the 50 MAN-positive units tested, 20 showed a response to intra-arterial KCl; of these 20, 12 had a response to BK; 8 of these 12 units were additionally tested with capsaicin and all responded. KCl and capsaicin injections had similar mean response latencies (4.5 and 6.8 s), whereas BK had a longer mean latency (18.6 s). The mean peak response was greatest for capsaicin (168 impulses/s), then KCl (87.5 imp/s) and least with BK (36.4 imp/s). The mean response duration was longest with capsaicin (118 s), followed by BK (67.5 s) and least with KCl (27.9 s). Most of these were convergent wide dynamic range (WDR) neurons with a deep receptive field in the knee joint and hindlimb muscle and/or cutaneous distal hind limb digit, located to the dorsal or ventral periphery of the lateral division of the VPL, the VPLl. In addition, 8 neurons showed inhibitory responses to KCl and/or BK injections. The background activity of the VPLl neurons activated by saphenous nerve stimulation was inhibited by the nociceptive articular stimulus with a magnitude and time course which mirrored the excitatory responses in the periphery of VPLl. These results support the concept that the lateral thalamus plays an important role in mediating discriminative aspects of joint pain.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Cutaneous mechanoreceptors ; Mossy fibers ; Climbing fibers ; Integration ; Purkyně cell groups
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The preceding two papers gave accounts of mossy fiber (MF) or of climbing fiber (CF) inputs to Purkyně cells under conditions where the other input was depressed by the experimental procedure. By utilizing either chloralose anesthesia or decerebration with sparing of the pyramidal tracts it has been possible to study the convergence of MF and CF inputs onto single Purkyně cells. The stimulation of cutaneous mechanoreceptors, the recording procedures for unitary Purkyně cell discharges and the computer averaging techniques were as previously described. Testing by taps to the footpads evoked a combined MF and CF response more commonly than either response alone, and often both inputs were very effective. There was a tendency for such phasic CF responses to be more frequently observed than the tonic responses to pad pressure, but such responses did occur. Purkyně cells were located by the usual procedure along the microelectrode tracks later identified in serial sections. Those cells activated by the fast MF inputs from the pad receptors were found to be closely associated in groups or colonies. The delayed MF inputs probably via spino-reticular pathways were more widely dispersed. The topographical relationships of these colonies are displayed on maps of the unfolded cerebellar cortex for lobules II to VI of both vermis and pars intermedia. In general these distributions of Purkyně cells activated from forefoot and hindfoot appear as islands in the larger fields that degeneration procedures exhibit for the cuneocerebellar and dorsal spinocerebellar tracts respectively. The CF inputs from the footpads also project to these same colonies, so that there are conjoint MF and CF colonies. The several modalities of the cutaneous mechanoreceptors of the forefoot or hindfoot often participate in the receptive fields of individual Purkyně cells. Such a field may be restricted to one or other side of the foot, all tested cutaneous mechanoreceptors then sharing approximately in the same restriction. Finally it is shown how these experimental findings relate to the theories of cerebellar function, particularly to the dynamic loop hypothesis.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Cutaneous mechanoreceptors ; Mossy fibers ; Purkyně cells ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary This paper gives an account of single Purkyně cell responses when three types of mechanical stimulation, as in the previous paper, are applied to the forefoot and hindfoot of the decerebrate unanesthetized cat. Attention was concentrated on the effects of brief mechanical pulses to the footpad. Recording was extracellular by glass microelectrodes and special precautions were taken in identifying the spike responses as being due to a single Purkyně cell and in securing its effective isolation for our computer averaging techniques, as described in the previous papers. All Purkyně cells were in the ipsilateral anterior lobe in the lateral vermis or pars intermedia of lobules III, IV, V, except for a few recordings in the extreme rostral zone of lobule VI. Mechanical pulses or taps evoked responses from many Purkyně cells which were pure excitatory, pure inhibitory or admixtures thereof. The latencies of onset were usually in the range of 12–20 msec from the onset of the tap, which tends to be a little longer than the observed latencies for mossy fiber responses described in the preceding paper. There was often a considerable difference in the sizes of the responses evoked from different pads of the same foot, and the usual threshold for response was below 0.2 mm amplitude. Durations of responses were usually 10–20 msec for excitation and 50–100 msec for inhibition. Pressure pulses to the central foot pads of 2 sec duration evoked a wide variety of responses: brief phasic at “on” and “off” that could be admixtures of excitation and inhibition; almost pure tonic excitations or inhibitions that were well maintained during the 2 sec; phasic-tonic responses in various relative degrees. Usually 500 g was maximally effective and the threshold was below 100 g. Hair receptors were stimulated preferentially by brief air jets, there being brief excitatory or inhibitory responses much as with taps, but with rather longer latency. The effective area was usually fairly extensive over the hairy skin of the foot. In general the effects on Purkyně cells by cutaneous mechanoreceptors acting via mossy fibers were in accord with the mossy fiber responses reported in the preceding paper and with the well-known excitatory and inhibitory effects that are exerted by mossy fiber inputs on Purkyně cells.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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