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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 31 (1978), S. 511-522 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Muscle group IV afferent units ; Muscle pain ; Chemo-nociceptors ; Mechanoreceptors ; Contraction-sensitive receptors
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In an attempt to differentiate between nociceptive group IV muscle receptors and “ergoceptive” ones, the discharges of single group IV fibres from skeletal muscle in response to local pressure, sustained stretch, repetitive contraction and intra-arterial injections of bradykinin, 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), potassium, phosphate, and lactate were studied in anaesthetized cats. Of the 75 fibres of the study, 5 units were activated by sustained stretch, the responses occurring with a delay. These stretch-sensitive units could not be activated by local pressure or muscular contraction. Thirteen group IV afferents raised their discharge frequency during repetitive contractions. Some of the units responded immediately with the onset of the contractions, whereas the others showed a pronounced delay. Forty-six units were tested with all or most of the above mechanical and chemical stimuli. In 32 afferents a response to at least one of the stimuli was present. Taking only these units into account, several groups of receptors could be distinguished by their different response combinations. One group was activated by pain-producing substances, but not by muscular activity and thus showed nociceptive properties. Another group showed a raised activity during muscular contractions but did not respond to the algesic agents bradykinin and 5-HT. Units belonging to this group might serve as “ergoceptors”. The borderline between the two groups was not sharp, a considerable number of group IV afferents was found which had both nociceptive and “ergoceptive” properties.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Mechanoreceptors ; Cutaneous Afferents ; Afterpotentials ; Primary Afferent Depolarization ; Spinal Cord
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Mechanoreceptors of the hairy skin and the central pad of the cat's hind foot were activated using piezo-electric crystals as mechanical stimulators. Their afferent fibres were traced in the lumbar spinal cord by stimulating antidromically and by recording the collision of the antidromic and orthodromic action potentials. Low threshold mechanoreceptor units could be stimulated in isolation. It was possible, therefore, to follow the postspike excitability changes of their fibres in the spinal cord without interference from other spinal cord potentials. Primary afferent depolarization has been induced in cutaneous afferents by stimulating muscle and cutaneous nerves. It has been found that the a cutaneous fibres of mechanoreceptors were depolarized by volleys in a cutaneous fibres and to a lesser degree by volleys in Group I b, II and III muscle afferents but not by high threshold cutaneous afferents. The primary afferent depolarization of cutaneous fibres has been subjected to the action of an impulse propagating down that fibre to its central terminals. Excitability testing revealed that the amplitude and the time course of the primary afferent depolarization were only altered up to about 30 ms after the impulse indicating an active depolarization of the presynaptic terminals.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 6 (1968), S. 100-115 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Mechanoreceptors ; Pacinian corpuscles ; Cutaneous afferents ; Peripheral encoding ; Skin sensitivity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The properties of mechanosensitive units with large myelinated afferents were determined in the hairless skin of the central pad of the cat's hind foot, and the total afferent outflow from this region after short skin indentations and during constant force stimuli was measured in the plantar nerves. Basically three types of mechanosensitive units with afferent conduction velocities above 40 m/s were found: (a) receptors with the properties of Pacinian corpuscles (PC-receptors); (b) receptors which showed burst discharges for up to 500 ms after the onset of a constant force stimulus (RA-receptors); and (c) receptors which discharged throughout a constant force stimulus (SA-receptors). The afferent conduction velocities of these units were in the same range as those of receptors from the surrounding hairy skin. A considerable proportion of receptors from both skin areas had no collaterals in the dorsal columns. The afferent outflow after short skin indentations of up to 5 μ displacement consisted of impulses from PC-receptors only. Stimuli of 20 μ recruited between 50 and 100 afferent units of which less than 10% were other than PC-units. During constant force stimuli the afferent outflow came from SA-receptors only. Ten seconds after stimulus onset a 500 g stimulus evoked an afferent discharge of about 1000 imp/s and a 1000 g stimulus of about 1700 imp/s. At all times a power function of the form F=K · (S−S0)n related the afferent discharge F to the stimulus intensity S. The exponents were around n=0.5 and tended to increase in the course of the stimulus.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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