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  • 1990-1994  (314)
  • 1965-1969  (55)
  • 1955-1959
  • Cat
  • 101
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Corticofugal feedback ; Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Visual cortex ; Intrageniculate inhibition ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In a previous study, we have shown that the corticofugal projection to the dLGN enhances inhibitory mechanisms underlying length tuning. This suggests that the inhibitory influences deriving from the corticofugal feedback should exhibit characteristics that reflect the response properties of orientation-tuned layer VI cells. Here we report data obtained from experiments using a bipartite visual stimulus, with an inner section over the dLGN cell receptive field centre and an outer section extending beyond it. For both X and Y cells there was a modulation of the strength of the surround antagonism of centre responses that was dependent on the orientation alignment of contours in the two components of the stimulus. Layer VI cells showed maximal responses when the two components were aligned to the same orientation; dLGN cells showed a minimal response. Varying the orientation alignment of the inner and outer components of the stimulus in a randomised, interleaved fashion showed that bringing the stimulus into alignment resulted in a 24.28% increase in the surround antagonism of the centre response. Blocking cortical activity showed this effect of alignment to be strongly dependent on corticofugal feedback. This effect of orientation alignment appears to apply for any absolute orientation of the alignment condition and supports the view that an entire subset of cortical orientation columns generate the feedback influencing any given dLGN cell. This mechanism makes dLGN cells sensitive to the orientation domain discontinuities in elongated contours moving across their receptive field.
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  • 102
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Trigeminal nucleus ; Tactile sensation ; Mechanoreceptor ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Experiments were performed to determine whether the receptors of the glabrous skin of the cat planum nasale (PN) could function in tactile analysis. Trigeminal projection sites of the PN were first identified using transganglionic transport of wheat germ agglutin-in-horseradish peroxidase and horseradish peroxidase. Restricted projection sites were identified in this way among the interstitial neurons of the trigeminal tract, in the dorsal horn of the medulla, in subnucleus interpolaris and to a lesser extent in subnucleus oralis. Electrophysiological recording in the trigeminal spinal nucleus confirmed the major neuroanatomical findings and confirmed the paucity of PN projections to the trigeminal system. Most neurons innervated from the PN have small receptive fields, are rapidly adapting and responsive to PN vibration at amplitudes as low as 10 μm. Neurons could be entrained at frequencies below 80 Hz. This upper limit for entrainment presumably reflects the lack of pacinian corpuscles in the PN. A limited number of slowly adapting neurons were found, but only responded to PN displacements of 400 μm and above. The data suggest that the PN can function in tactile analysis to a limited degree. The significance of these findings is considered with respect to the organization of neural systems controlling head movement.
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  • 103
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Superior colliculus ; Tectoreticulospinal neurons ; Slow, orienting eye movements ; eye-head coordination ; Intra-axonal horseradish peroxidase ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The activity of tectoreticulospinal neurons (TRSN) during orienting gaze shifts was studied in alert, head-fixed cats by intra-axonal recordings. The scope of the study was to evaluate the role of this class of superior colliculus neurons in the generation of slow eye movements (drifts) which often follow main-sequence saccades and sometimes appear as an independent motor event of orienting. The parameters of such movements are described in the first part of the paper. The organization of underlying pathways in the lower brainstem has been studied by intra-axonal horseradish peroxidase (HRP) tracing. The mean amplitude of postsaccadic drifts (PSD) is 1.21° (SD 0.63), but it can eventually reach 6–8°. PSDs have mean velocity of 14.9°/s (SD 4.28) and mean duration of 104.2 ms (SD 50.8). These two parameters are positively correlated with PSD amplitude. The presence of PSDs is usually associated with an increased neck muscle activity on the side toward which the eyes move. The durations of these two motor events show a reliable positive correlation. PSDs appear to occur when gaze error persists after a saccade and a correction is attempted by means of a slow eye movement and a head turn. The durations of TRSN bursts are, on average, longer than the sum of the lead time and the saccade duration. Bursts associated with combinations of saccades and PSD are significantly longer than those recorded in the absence of PSDs. The probability of occurrence of PSDs is higher when firing of TRSNs continues after saccade termination. Such prolonged discharges usually coincide with a combination of PSDs and phasic activation of the neck electromyogram. The mean firing rate of TRSNs during PSDs is 62% of that during saccade-related portions of the burst and declines to 45% after the end of PSDs. According to its timing and intensity, postsaccadic firing of TRSNs is appropriate as a signal underlying slow, corrective eye movements and later portions of phasic neck muscle contractions during orienting. Intraaxonal HRP labeling showed that visuomotor TRSNs of the X type (n = 3) terminate in the abducens nucleus, with 145–331 boutons terminaux and en passant. Average bouton densities in the nucleus are lower than in the periabducens reticular formation, but higher than in more rostral paramedian pontine reticular formation (PPRF) regions. Terminal fields in the PPRF match the locations of “eye-neck” reticulospinal neurons (RSNs) and exitatory burst neurons. Termination densities comparable with those in the caudal PPRF are found also in the rostral nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis, which contains phasic RSNs (“neck bursters”) and inhibitory burst neurons. Morphological observations alone do not exclude firing rate modulation of abducens motoneurons through the monosynaptic tectal pathway. However, the available physiological data point to a major role of a multiple convergent connection involving the eye-neck RSNs. In conclusion, the signals of X type TRSNs, reinforced by parallel connection through RSNs, encode mainly the intended head movement. Collateral actions of these two populations may be sufficient to induce slow, orienting eye movements, independently of the burst output from the classic saccadic generator.
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  • 104
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pontine reticular formation ; Serotonin ; Postural augmentation ; Alpha-motoneurons ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Intrapontine microinjections of serotonin in acutely decerebrated cats resulted in the bilateral augmentation of the postural muscle tone of the hindlimbs. Optimal injection sites were located in the dorsomedial part of the rostral pontine reticular formation corresponding to the nucleus reticularis ponds oralis (NRPo). In this study, attempts were made to elucidate the cellular basis for the serotoninergically induced augmentation of postural muscle tone by recording the electromyographic (EMG) activity of hindlimb extensor muscles, the monosynaptic reflex responses evoked by electrical stimulation of group Ia muscle afferent fibres and the membrane potentials of hindlimb alpha-motoneurons (MNs). Serotonin injections resulted not only in the augmentation of the EMG activity of gastrocnemius soleus muscles, but also in the restoration of EMG suppression, which was induced by previous injection of carbachol into the NRPo. Extensor and flexor monosynaptic reflex responses were facilitated by serotonin injections into the NRPo. Such reflex facilitation was not induced by serotonin injections into the mesencephalic or the medullary reticular formation. Intrapontine serotonin injections resulted in membrane depolarization of extensor and flexor MNs with decreases in input resistance and rheobase. Spontaneous depolarizing synaptic potentials (EPSPs) increased in both frequency and amplitude. Peak voltage of Ia monosynaptic EPSPs also increased. Serotonin injections which followed carbachol injections resulted in membrane depolarization of MNs along with an increase in the frequency of spontaneous EPSPs and a decrease in carbachol-induced inhibitory postsynaptic potentials. Following pontine carbachol injections, antidromic and orthodromic responses in MNs were suppressed. Discharges of MNs evoked by intracellular current injections were also suppressed, but were restored following serotonin injections. These results indicate that postsynaptic excitation, presynaptic facilitation and disinhibition (withdrawal of postsynaptic inhibition) simultaneously act on the hindlimb MNs during serotonin-induced postural augmentation and restoration.
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  • 105
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Motor cortex ; Reversible inactivation ; Reaching ; Muscimol ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract This study analyzed changes in the performance of a reaching task and its adaptive modification produced by reversible inactivation of three sites within the forelimb representation of the motor cortex (MCx, area 4γ) in five cats by microinjections of muscimol. Two sites were located in the lateral MCx, rostral (RL-MCx) and caudal (CL-MCx) to the end of the cruciate sulcus, where intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) produced contraction of the most distal muscles. The third site was located more medially, in the anterior sigmoid gyrus (RM-MCx) where ICMS primarily produced contraction of more proximal muscles. The task required the animals to reach into a horizontal target well, located in front of them at one of three possible heights, to grasp and retrieve a small piece of food. The height of the reach was primarily achieved by elbow flexion. Grasping consisted primarily of digit flexion, and food retrieval consisted of forearm supination and shoulder extension. In some blocks of trials, an obstacle was placed in the path of the limb to assess the animal's ability to adaptively adjust the kinematic characteristics of their response trajectory. In normal animals, contact with the bar on the first trial triggered a corrective response at short latency that allowed the paw to circumvent the bar. On all subsequent trials, the trajectory was adapted to prevent contact with the obstacle, with a safety margin of about 1 cm. Inactivation at all sites produced a slowing of movement, a protracted and extended forelimb posture, and increased variability of initial limb position. In addition, inactivation of RL-MCx immediately produced systematic reaching errors, consisting of hypermetric movements, as well as impaired grasping and food retrieval. The degree of hypermetria was similar for all target heights and was not associated with alterations in trajectory control. During inactivation, animals did not compensate for the hypermetria by reducing paw path elevation, suggesting a defect in kinematic planning or in adaptive control. This was confirmed by finding that trajectory adaptation to avoid bar contact was impaired during RL-MCx inactivation. The short latency corrective response, triggered by contact of the limb with the obstacle was, however, preserved. Inactivation of CL-MCx did not impair aiming, grasping, or adaptation immediately after injection. However, impairments occurred after about 1 h postinjection, and at that time mimicked the effects of RL-MCx inactivation. This delay suggests that the drug was acting indirectly on the RL-MCx. Inactivation of RM-MCx did not impair the control of distal muscles, but the reaches became hypometric. The hypometria was greater for higher targets, suggesting that it resulted from weakness. Our results suggest that both rostral regions of the forelimb area of MCx play a more important role in the planning and execution of the prehension response than the caudal portion. We hypothesize that (1) the slowing of movement, forelimb postural changes, hypometria, and grasping and food retrieval impairments are due to defective control of muscles represented locally at each site in MCx and that (2) aiming and adaptation defects, which are produced only by RL-MCx inactivation, result from disruption of integrative mechanisms underlying sensorimotor transformations that normally assure movement accuracy.
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  • 106
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 95 (1993), S. 177-182 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual cortex ; Synchronised oscillations ; Spike-triggered averaging ; Temporal population coding ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Synchronised oscillatory population events (35–80 Hz; 60–300 ms) can be induced in the visual cortex of cats by specific visual stimulation. The oscillatory events are most prominent in local slow wave field potentials (LFP) and multiple unit spikes (MUA). We investigated how and when single cortical neurons are involved in such oscillatory population events. Simultaneous recordings of single cell spikes, LFP and MUA were made with up to seven microelectrodes. Three states of single cell participation in oscillations were distinguished in spike triggered averages of LFP or MUA from the same electrode: (1) Rhythmic states were characterised by the presence of rhythmicity in single cell spike patterns (35–80 Hz). These rhythms were correlated with LFP and MUA oscillations. (2) Lock-in states lacked rhythmic components in single cell spike patterns, while spikes were phase-coupled with LFP or MUA oscillations. (3) During non-participation states LFP or MUA oscillations were present, but single cell spike trains were neither rhythmic nor phase coupled to these oscillations. Stimulus manipulations (from “optimal” to “suboptimal” for the generation of oscillations) often led to systematic transitions between these states (from rhythmic to lock-in to non-participation). Single cell spike coupling was generally associated with negative peaks in LFP oscillations, irrespective of the cortical separation of single cell and population signals (0–6 mm). Our results suggest that oscillatory cortical population activities are not only supported by local and distant neurons with rhythmic spike patterns, but also by those with irregular patterns in which some spikes occur phase-locked to oscillatory events.
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  • 107
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 96 (1993), S. 260-272 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Hypoxia ; Hypercapnia ; Central chemoreceptors ; Denervated cat ; Peripheral chemoreceptors ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Several studies have suggested that the caudal hypothalamus modulates responses to hypercapnia and hypoxia. In addition, this area of the hypothalamus contains neurons that have a sympathoexcitatory discharge. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether the basal discharge of caudal hypothalamic neurons that are stimulated by hypercapnia or hypoxia is related to cardiovascular (sympathetic discharge and/or the cardiac cycle) and/or respiratory activity (phrenic nerve discharge). Hypothalamic single unit activity, phrenic nerve activity, and cervical sympathetic nerve activity were recorded in anesthetized cats. Computer averaging techniques were used to compare temporally the discharge of hypothalamic neurons with cardiovascular and/or respiratory activity. Cardiorespiratory and hypothalamic neuronal responses to ventilation with hypoxic (10% O2/90% N2) and hypercapnic (5% CO2/95% O2) gases were determined in intact and in peripherally-chemodenervated, barodenervated cats. Thirty-two percent of hypothalamic neurons were stimulated by a hypercapnic stimulus in intact cats; of those that were stimulated by hypercapnia, all had a basal discharge related to cardiovascular and/or respiratory activity. Hypoxia significantly increased the discharge rate of 21% of hypothalamic units in intact animals; 90% of those had a cardiovascular and/or respiratory-related rhythm. Only 13% of the neurons were stimulated by both hypoxia and hypercapnia. Similar results were found in barodenervated, peripherally chemodenervated cats. Neurons excited by these stimuli in both the intact and denervated cats were found to be concentrated in the posterior hypothalamic area. The results of this study suggest that a group of caudal hypothalamic neurons contribute to the cardiorespiratory responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia, but via separate subpopulations of neurons. In addition, input from peripheral baroreceptor and chemoreceptor afferents is not required for this modulation.
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  • 108
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Area 17 ; Lateral posterior nucleus ; Pulvinar ; Superior colliculus ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The main input of the lateral part of the cat's lateralis posterior-pulvinar complex (LP-P) comes from the primary visual cortex. We investigated the response properties of cells in area 17 projecting to the striate-recipient zone (LPl) of the cat's LP-P complex. The cells' receptive fields were stimulated with drifting sine-wave gratings. Cells whose fibres terminate in the superior colliculus were also recorded, to determine how their properties compare with those of cortico-LPl cells and to investigate the possibility that LPl is innervated by collaterals of cortico-tectal units. A total of 26 cells in the striate cortex were identified by antidromic activation from the LPl (mean latency 2.2 ms) and 22 from the colliculus (mean latency 2.5 ms). Only six cortical cells could be activated from the LPl and the colliculus. All cortico-LPl cells except for two responded to drifting sinusoidal gratings with unmodulated discharges (AC/DC ratios 〈1). On the basis of their modulation index, these units were classified as complex cells. All cortico-LPl cells were selective for the orientation of gratings (mean bandwidth of 28°). There was a tendency for cortico-LPl cells to prefer vertical and horizontal orientations. More than half of these cells (57%) were direction selective. Strong orientation anisotropies were also found in the receptive fields of cortico-tectal cells, since almost all units responded preferentially to horizontally oriented gratings. The mean preferred spatial and temporal frequencies of cortico-LPl cells were 0.74 c/deg (bandwidth 2.03 octaves) and 2.7 Hz (bandwidth 2.5 octaves), respectively. These properties did not differ significantly from those of cortico-tectal cells. Most cortico-LPl cells (72%) exhibited contrast-response curves with saturation at low contrast (mean half-saturation 0.2). For the remaining units, the responses increased linearly with contrast without clear saturation. For more than half of cortico-tectal cells (60%), the contrast function was also characterised by a response saturation. Almost all cortico-LPl cells responded to moving random dot patterns with mean tuning functions of 43.6°. “Standard” as well as “special” complex cells were found to be equally responsive to the motion of visual noise. Similar properties were recorded for cortico-tectal cells (mean bandwidth of 44.2°). Cortico-LPl and cortico-tectal cells were either binocularly or monocularly driven by the contralateral eye and their mean spontaneous firing rates were 11.7 and 10.9 spikes/s, respectively. These cells were presumably located in layer V. Stimulation of LPl and colliculus also evoked trans-synaptic responses in area 17. The average latency of the orthodromic responses from LPl was much shorter than that from the colliculus (medians 3.5 and 50 ms, respectively). The findings indicate that almost all cortico-LPl units have complex receptive fields and that their overall properties differ from those of recipient cells in LPl. These results also indicate that LPl is not likely to be innervated by collaterals of fibres of cortico-tectal cells. While cortico-LPl and cortico-tectal cells appear to form two distinct populations, there is no significant difference between the overall properties of these two cell groups.
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  • 109
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Anxiety ; Phobia ; Plus-maze ; Cat ; Benzodiazepines
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Diazepam (5 mg/kg) increased the number of shocks accepted by rats on two successive trials in the punished drinking test. Thus, the phenomenon of “one trial tolerance” to the anxiolytic effects of benzodiazepines in the elevated plus-maze does not generalise to this other animal test of anxiety. FG 7142 (20 mg/kg) and prior exposure to the odour of a cat had significant anxiogenic effects on two successive trials in the plus-maze. Thus the phenomenon of “one trial tolerance” does not generalise to these anxiogenic effects in the plus-maze. Furthermore, chlordiazepoxide retained its ability to counteract the anxiogenic effects in the plus-maze of prior exposure to cat odour, over successive trials. On the basis of these and previous experiments it is suggested that the state of anxiety generated on trial 2 in the plus-maze is close to a phobic state, against which benzodiazepines are relatively ineffective. Chlordiazepoxide (5 and 10 mg/kg) was also ineffective against the behavioural responses of rats during exposure to cat odour, another possible animal test of phobia. This contrasted with its efficacy against the anxiogenic effects of cat odour that subsequently generalised to and could be detected in the plus-maze.
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  • 110
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Spinal cord ; Motoneurones ; Dorsal horn ; Neurofilament ; Phosphorylation ; Immunocytochemistry ; Rat ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Neurofilament immunoreactivity was examined in spinal cords of rats and cats with antibodies to all three subunits (68 kD, 155 kD and 200 kD) and to different phosphorylation states of 200 kD. NFHP-, an antibody against non-phosphorylated 200 kD, labelled all rat neuronal perikarya but failed to labet cat neurofilaments. In both species, the perikarya and processes of motoneurones were immunoreactive for all three subunits but most dorsal horn neuronal perikarya were not immunoreactive for 68 kD and 155 kD. Motoneuronal perikarya and proximal processes showed filamentous labelling for 68 kD but not for 155 kD in the rat, while in neither species did these show labelling with RT97, an antibody against a highly phosphorylated form of 200 kD; immunoreactivity for 200 kD was present in both filamentous (probably partially phosphorylated) and non-filamentous (non-phosphorylated) forms, but in dorsal horn neurones only the latter was present. Interpretations consistent with this data are: in rat and possibly also cat, motoneuronal neurofilaments consist of a 68 kD backbone with partially phosphorylated 200 kD sidearms, with both 155 kD and 200 kD (non-phosphorylated) subunits in a non-filamentous form; this neurofilament becomes more highly phosphorylated along the proximal processes. The dorsal horn neurones probably contain 200 kD in a non-filamentous form but may lack the other subunits.
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  • 111
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 272 (1993), S. 321-327 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Calcification ; Calcinosis ; Calculi ; Microliths ; Salivary gland calculi ; Salivary glands ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract This investigation concerns the natural history of microlith in the salivary glands of cat. Microliths were detected in more sublingual than submandibular glands and were almost absent in the parotid. They were found intraparenchymally, intraluminally and interstitially, and ultrastructurally in phagosomes of acinar, ductal and myoepithelial cells, intermixed with the cytoplasm of degenerate acinar cells, and in intraparenchymal macrophages and a multinuclear giant cell. They appear to form in healthy acinar cells during autophagocytosis, and possibly to be discharged luminally, laterally or basally, and to form in the debris of degenerate cells intraparenchymally and intraluminally. They appear to be removed by expulsion in the saliva, scavenging macrophages, and possible eventual degradation in the parenchymal phagosomes. The greater occurrence of microliths in the sublingual gland may relate to a low level of secretory activity, and the near absence of microliths in the parotid to a low level of calcium. The feline salivary glands were found to be an outstanding model for the investigation of microlithiasis.
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  • 112
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 274 (1993), S. 267-277 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Retina, mammalian ; GABAA receptors, β2/β3 subunits ; Amacrine cells ; Bipolar cells ; Rod pathway ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The distribution of GABAA receptors in the inner plexiform layer of cat retina was studied using monoclonal antibodies against the β2/β3 subunits. A dense band of receptor labeling was found in the inner region of the inner plexiform layer where the rod bipolar axons terminate. Three forms of evidence indicate that the GABAA receptor labeling is on the indoleamine-accumulating, GABAergic amacrine cell that is synaptically interconnected with the rod bipolar cell terminal. (1) Electron microscopy showed that the anti-GABAA receptor antibody (62-3G1) labeled profiles that were postsynaptic to rod bipolar axons and made reciprocal synapses. (2) Indoleamine uptake (and the subsequent autofluorescence) combined with GABAA receptor immunohistochemistry showed co-localization of the two markers in half of the receptor-positive amacrine cells. (3) Double labeling demonstrated that half of the receptor-positive somata also contained GABA. These results indicate that a GABAergic amacrine cell interconnected with the rod bipolar cell, most likely the so-called A17 amacrine cell, itself bears GABAA receptors.
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  • 113
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Cell & tissue research 273 (1993), S. 193-200 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Galanin ; Vasoactive intestinal peptide ; Bronchi ; Innervation ; Bronchial glands ; Neurons ; Colocalization ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Galanin is a 29 amino acid residue neuropeptide. In mammalian airways, galanin is found in nerve fibers associated with airway smooth muscle, bronchial glands, and blood vessels, and in nerve cell bodies of airway ganglia. The present study was conducted to determine if galanin-containing fibers in the walls of feline airways originate from the nerve cell bodies of airway ganglia. The colocalization of galanin with vasoactive intestinal peptide was also investigated. Organotypic cultures of cat airways were held in culture for 0 (nonculture control), 3, 5, and 7 days. After each culture period, the distribution of galanin and the colocalization of galanin with vasoactive intestinal peptide were determined by immunocytochemistry. Galanin-containing fibers were found in bronchial smooth muscle, around bronchial glands and in the walls of bronchial arteries and arterioles throughout the culture period. Nerve fibers and cell bodies containing both galanin and vasoactive intestinal peptide were observed after all culture periods. Nerve fibers and cells bodies that contained galanin frequently contained vasoactive intestinal peptide as well, but nerve fibers with only galanin or vasoactive intestinal were also observed. Galanin- and vasoactive intestinal peptide-containing nerve fibers and cell bodies were both well maintained throughout the culture period. The findings show that galanin-containing nerve fibers associated with bronchial smooth muscle, bronchial glands, and bronchial arteries, originate from nerve cell bodies of intrinsic airway ganglia, and that galanin and vasoactive intestinal peptide are frequently colocalized in these neurons.
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  • 114
    ISSN: 1573-2622
    Keywords: Acetylcholine ; Cat ; Physostigmine ; Scopolamine ; Visual cortex ; Visual evoked potential (VEP)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Steady—state pattern visual evoked potentials were recorded from the surface of the cat primary visual cortex before and after the intravenous administration of physostigmine, an agent that blocks the enzyme responsible for the breakdown of synaptically released acetylcholine. Under pentobarbital anesthesia, physostigmine increased the amplitude and changed the phase of the second response harmonic of the visual evoked potential, whereas the amplitude and phase of the fourth harmonic were not affected. These effects persisted for 15 to 45 minutes and were blocked by prior treatment with scopolamine or atropine. In addition, scopolamine or atropine administered 5 to 10 minutes after physostigmine returned the visual evoked potential to the baseline state. In comparison, when nitrous oxide was used, physostigmine caused a marked reduction in visual evoked potential amplitude, an effect that was reversed by subsequent atropine. These results indicate that the cholinergic system influences the visual evoked potential via a muscarinic pathway and that this influence is strongly affected by the anesthetic regimen used.
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  • 115
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Medical & biological engineering & computing 31 (1993), S. 449-458 
    ISSN: 1741-0444
    Keywords: Cat ; Length/tension ; Models ; Muscle
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The isotonic length/force relationships of nine skeletal muscles in the cat's hindlimb were determined using electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve branches. Large variability in the active, passive, total force patterns and elongation ranges was found. The lateral gastrocnemius (LG), medial gastrocnemius (MG), peroneus longus (PL), flexor digitorum longus (FDL), tibialis posterior (TP) and soleus (Sol) showed symmetric active force curces, whereas those of the extensor digitorum longus (EDL), tibialis anterior (TA) and peroneus brevis (PB) were asymmetric. The total force curves of the EDL, LG, MG, FDL, TP and Sol increased quasilinearly through the elongation range, whereas the PL and PB increased in a nonlinear fashion. The TA had an intermediate plateau. The ranges were generally asymmetric, with a longer shortening range than lengthening past the optimum length. A simple model of the active force was fitted to all except the MG, EDL and TA, which are complex, with at least two compartments. These were successfully fitted with a two-compartment model. The variabilities encountered in the various isotonic length/force curves confirm the need to represent muscles according to their architecture to account for the variety of properties exhibited, which reflect their adaptations to their functions.
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  • 116
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    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    The @Anatomical Record 236 (1993), S. 191-197 
    ISSN: 0003-276X
    Keywords: Protein gene product (PGP) 9.5 ; Immunocytochemistry ; Neuroendocrine cells (NEC) ; Neuroepithelial bodies (NEB) ; Cat ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Variously fixed, wax-embedded lung and gastrointestinal serial tissue sections from newborn to adult cats were stained with hematoxylin-eosin (H&E), Grimelius' silver, and immunohistochemical techniques using antisera to protein gene product (PGP) 9.5, a neuron-specific protein under strong evolutionary constraints. PGP 9.5 is revealed as a pan-neuroendocrine marker useful for tracing the pulmonary diffuse neuroendocrine system (PDNES) and studying the relationships between neuronal and neuroendocrine elements at various stages of life. Its occurrence is also compared in the pulmonary and the gastrointestinal tract. In spite of a close resemblance to already described neuroepithelial bodies (NEB) of other mammals, cat NEB feature typical constitutional and distributional difference, illustrating interspecies differences.The number of PGP 9.5 immunopositive pulmonary neuroendocrine cells declines gradually after 3 weeks and throughout adult life. Immunoreactivity in neuronal elements is lost after 1 week of age. In gastrointestinal tissues, only neuronal lelements immunostain, suggesting functional variations or a separate embryological origin for enteroendocrine cells. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
    Additional Material: 7 Ill.
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  • 117
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    The @Anatomical Record 236 (1993), S. 181-190 
    ISSN: 0003-276X
    Keywords: Neuroepithelial bodies ; Nerves ; Cat ; Lung ; Electronmicroscopy ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Cell & Developmental Biology
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Neuroepithelial bodies (NEB) occur throughout the airway mucosa and alveolar parenchyma of kitten lungs. In the bronchi, they are often situated on top of a cartilage plate. They form compact corpuscles containing 10-20 corpuscular cells and appear covered with a layer of flattened Claracells. Kitten NEB are occasionally observed to display mitosis of the corpuscular epithelial cells. A prominent blood capillary lies at their basal pole. The corpuscular cells contain numerous dense core vesicles (DCV), whose number and diameter remain unchanged with age. Kitten NEB are innervated by nerve fibres that “loop” through the corpuscle and form morphologically afferent as well as efferent nerve endings. The nerve endings display afferent synaptic junctions with the corpuscular cells and sometimes run in clusters, so that they contact each other. Many nerve endings undergo spontaneous degeneration.We conclude that kitten NEB are well adapted to function as chemoreceptors and as endocrine or paracrine organs. Their chemoreceptor activity could be modulated by axon reflexes since their afferent nerve endings are often continuous with the efferent ones, as well as by interneural modulation since nerve endings often form clusters. In addition, kitten NEB innervation appears to involute rapidly soon after birth. This may indicate that their chemoreceptor function is only of primary importance during gestation and at birth. However, the secretory function of kitten NEB, as evidenced by the unchanged numbers and dimensions of their DCV, seems to remain steady throughout life.© 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
    Additional Material: 12 Ill.
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    Journal of comparative physiology 170 (1992), S. 129-143 
    ISSN: 1432-1351
    Keywords: Ontogeny ; Auditory system ; Tonotopy ; Chicken ; Rodent ; Cat ; Bat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary In the early postnatal period of many mammals and in the perihatching period of chicks the auditory ranges are restricted to the species-specific low- and mid-frequency ranges. During subsequent development, the high frequency hearing expands (depending on the species) by 1–4 octaves. Adult-like audition is established between the 4th and the 7th week. It is still discussed controversially, how the extension of the auditory ranges relates to the maturation of orderly frequency representation in the cochleae of the respective species. The present review summarizes investigations of the development of tonotopy in nuclei of the central auditory system, and discusses how the centrally acquired data might contribute to the understanding of the maturation of cochlear stimulus transduction and to the development of frequency maps.
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    Comparative clinical pathology 2 (1992), S. 175-178 
    ISSN: 1433-2981
    Keywords: Amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia ; Cat ; Haemolytic anaemia ; Immune-mediated diseases
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract An eleven-month-old female spayed domestic shorthair cat was presented for investigation of pruritic skin lesions and haemorrhage. Haematological evaluation revealed a markedly regenerative anaemia, neutrophilia with left shift, monocytosis, basophilia and severe thrombocytopenia. The direct antiglobulin test and serum antinuclear antibody tests were positive. Serologic and immunofluorescent antibody tests for feline leukaemia virus were negative. Bone marrow cytology revealed a lack of megakaryocytes with erythroid and myeloid hyperplasia. A peritoneopericardial diaphragmatic hernia was detected ultrasonographically, but was not considered to be related to the haematologic abnormalities. An immune-mediated aetiology for the amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia was considered likely based on the concomitant positive direct antiglobulin and antinuclear antibody tests, but the cat responded poorly to short-term immunosuppressive therapy and was euthanized.
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    Anatomy and embryology 185 (1992), S. 45-55 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Dicephalia ; Anterior duplications ; Congenital malformations ; Conjoined twins ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A detailed anatomical study of a dicephalic iniodymic monosomic cat in conjunction with the morphogenetical implications of the observed anomalies is presented. The animal exhibited two heads joined at the level of an anomalous medial exoccipital bone. Two brains and two foramina magna were present. The vertebral column was single but the cranial cervical vertebrae (C2 to C5) had doubled bodies. Cervical rachischisis with myeloschisis were associated defects. Two nasopharyngeal and oropharyngeal cavities converged caudally into a single laryngopharynx. The esophagus, larynx and trachea were single. Duplication of the tongue and hyoid apparatus was present. Palatoschisis affected both oral cavities. Hypoplasia of the anatomical structures in the medial aspects of both heads was observed. Microphthalmia was also observed in both medial eyes. Comparative aspects of the morphology, causative agents, and mechanisms and anomalous morphogenesis of anterior duplications are reviewed and discussed.
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  • 121
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 59-66 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Reflexes ; Electromyography ; Nuchal afferents ; Neck muscles ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Short-latency reflexes were studied in the neck muscles of four alert cats following electrical stimulation of nerves supplying biventer cervicis (BC), splenius (SP) or rectus capitis posterior (RCP). Reflexes were assessed by comparing levels of EMG activity of muscles before and after each stimulus, as the cats lapped milk, licked their paws or walked on a treadmill. When BC or SP nerves were stimulated at 1.5–4 times threshold (T) for their motor axons, no short-latency heteronymous reflexes could be identified in most neck muscles. However, stimulation of RCP nerves produced inhibitory effects as early as 3–4 ms in the ipsilateral BC, CM, and SP muscles and 6 ms in contralateral BC. At stimulus strengths above 4xT, a more complex pattern of inhibitory or excitatory effects was observed in CM, SP and the intervertebral muscle spinalis dorsi. The reflex effects were attenuated or abolished by partial or complete C1 dorsal rhizotomy (2 cats). Cervicocollic reflex data may need to be reevaluated to consider the possible effects of disinhibition rather than excitation in short-latency reflex pathways.
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  • 122
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 169-180 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Auditory cortex ; Motion ; Depth ; Binaural interaction ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Neuronal response properties such as phasic vs. tonic, onset vs. offset, monotonicity vs. non-monotonicity, and E/E vs. E/I, can be shown to act synergistically suggesting underlying mechanisms for selectivity to binaural intensity correlates of auditory sound source motion. Both identical (diotic), and oppositely directed dichotic AM ramps were used as stimuli in the lightly anesthetized cat, simulating motion in four canonical directions in 3-dimensional space. Motion in either azimuthal direction evokes selective activity in cells which respond best to the onset of monaural sound in one ear and show a decreased response to binaural stimulation (E/I or I/E). In some cells specificity is increased by “off” components in the non-dominant ear. Although these cells fire only at the onset of stationary sound, they fire throughout oppositely directed AM ramps. Motion toward or away from the head evokes responses from EE cells; strong binaural facilitation increases selectivity for motion in depth. The sharpness of direction of tuning was related to the degree of binaural facilitation in E/E cells. Selectivity for sound moving away from the head is correlated with “off” responses, while “on” responses correlate with preference for motion toward the head. Most units showed a monotonic rate function as AM ramp excursion and rate was increased. One third were selective for slower rates of intensity change and may therefore encode slower rates of stimulus motion, as well as direction of movement. The findings suggest that neural processing of auditory motion involves neural mechanisms distinct from those involved in processing stationary sound location and that these mechanisms arise from interactions between the more traditionally studied response properties of auditory cortex neurons.
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 229-232 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus ; Lagged cells ; Nonlagged cells ; Sensory processing ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary It has been suggested that lagged and nonlagged cells in the cat dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) represent state-dependent response modes of the same class of LGN cells. In two separate experiments with single-unit recording in the LGN of anaesthetized and paralysed adult cats, a lagged and a nonlagged X-cell were recorded simultaneously with the same microelectrode. For each pair of cells, the amplitude of the action potentials was sufficiently different to allow separate compilation of peri-stimulus-time-histograms. For all 4 cells, the visual response pattern to a stationary flashing light spot was typical of their respective cell class. These findings support the hypothesis that lagged and nonlagged cells are separate cell classes and indicate that the population of LGN cells do not appear as lagged during one state of modulatory input and as nonlagged during another.
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 345-354 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Neuronal subsets ; Pericellular antigen ; Monoclonal antibody ; Cat ; 301 ; VC1.1 ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We reported earlier that monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) 473 and 376 gave perineuronal staining of different subsets of central neurons, and that both immunoreactivities were labile to treatment with chondroitinase ABC. On the other hand, MAb 1B5, the immunoreactivity to which is uncovered by chondroitinase ABC, stained a neuronal subset that included neurons positive to MAbs 473 and 376 (Fujita et al. 1989). We now report a new antibody, MAb 374, that stained perimeter of neurons of a subset different from those stained by MAbs 473, 376 and 1B5. In the rat central nervous system MAb 374-positive cells were found in the neocortex, thalamic reticular nucleus, hippocampus, cerebellar cortex and nuclei, and in the brain stem. MAb 374-immunoreactive neuropil was found in the medial habenular, arcuate, dorsal endopiriform nuclei, and the two plexiform layers of the retina. The immunoreactivity was not affected by treatment with chondroitinase ABC. Immunoblot experiments using a rat brain homogenate revealed a specific band at a position corresponding to a molecular weight of 600 kD.
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 615-622 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellar cortex ; Mossy fibre input ; Parallel fibres ; Field potentials ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Mossy fibre evoked activity in the cerebellar cortex elicited by peripheral electrical stimulation was studied in chloralose anesthetized cats. The distribution of intracortical field potentials in the C3 and D zones was mapped in order to determine if there is a spread of synaptic activity outside the mossy fibre termination area. This area was identified by the presence of short latency synaptic field potentials in the granular layer. 2. Molecular layer field potentials were recorded up to 1.5 mm outside the mossy fibre termination area. The latencies of these potentials increased with increasing distance from the mossy fibre termination area, corresponding to a conduction velocity of about 0.4 m/s. 3. Recordings from Purkinje cells, within and outside the mossy fibre termination area, revealed an increase of simple spike activity at latencies corresponding to those of the field potentials in the same location. 4. From the spatial and temporal characteristics of the evoked activity, it is concluded that a mossy fibre input results in spread of synaptic activity along the parallel fibres. 5. The findings are discussed in relation to the recently discovered microzonal organization of the C3 zone. It is proposed that the organization of this zone offers a possibility for the control of muscle synergies, each synergy being represented by a mossy fibre input and the specific set of microzones activated by this input via the parallel fibres.
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    Experimental brain research 89 (1992), S. 484-495 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Forel's field H ; Oculomotor nucleus ; Reticular formation ; Central tegmental tract ; Eye movements ; Neck movements ; Vertical ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We studied axonal trajectories of single Forel's field H (FFH) neurones (n= 19) in the mesencephalon, pons and medulla by systematic antidromic threshold mapping in cats and differentiated them into two major types. Type I neurones were characterized by projections to the oculomotor nucleus (IIIn) and type II neurones by lack of projections to the IIIn. 2. Type I neurones (11/19) were further classified into three subtypes by the lowest level of projections; type Ic (n = 3) which projected to the cervical cord and type Ib (n = 7) which terminated at the ponto-medullary level and type Ia (n = 1) at more rostral level. In the mesencephalon, stem axons passed just lateral to the IIIn and projected collaterals to the IIIn and the ventral part of the periaqueductal gray matter. In the lower brain stem, stem axons of type Ib and Ic neurones passed in the dorsal part of the reticular formation or in the medial longitudinal fasciculus and projected collaterals to the dorsal part of the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis (NRPC) and the nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis (NRG) and the reticular formation underlying the nucleus prepositus hypoglossi (PH) and the raphe region. Projections to the superior colliculus were observed in two cases. 3. Type II neurones (8/19) were classified into 2 type IIb projecting to the ponto-medullary reticular formation and 6 type IIc projecting to the cervical spinal cord. In the mesencephalon, stem axons passed through a more lateral region than those of type I and projected collaterals to the mesencephalic reticular formation and the red nucleus. In the lower brain stem, the stem axons passed in the ventral part of the reticular formation corresponding to the central tegmental tract and projected collaterals to the ventral part of the NRPC and NRG. Projections to the interstitial nucleus of Cajal, the inferior olive and the reticular formation underlying the PH were also observed. 4. The dorsal and ventral location of, respectively, stem axons of type I and type II neurones in the lower brain stem was confirmed in a larger number of neurones in experiments with restricted mapping. 5. There was not much difference in location of cell bodies of type I (totally n = 50) and type II (n = 46) neurones. The proportion of spinal-projecting neurones were larger in type II (21/46, 46%) than in type I (7/50, 14%) neurones.
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  • 127
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    Keywords: Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Vision ; Binocular ; Cortico-geniculate ; Orientation ; Sensitivity ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The present experiments examined the extent to which binocular processing in the cat's dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) depends upon the spatial frequency, orientation, and direction of movement of stimuli presented to the nondominant eye. In Experiment 1, we tested the effects of varying these stimulus parameters on the responses of LGN cells to nondominant-eye stimulation. Sixteen of 34 cells tested had statistically significant responses to the nondominant eye and, in agreement with a previous study (Guido et al. 1989), the responsive cells were spatial-frequency sensitive. However, there was little evidence for orientation or direction sensitivity in responses to the nondominant eye: changes in discharge with changes in stimulus orientation and direction were small and were statistically significant in only nine of the cells. In Experiment 2, we tested the effects of varying spatial frequency, orientation, and direction of movement of stimuli presented to the nondominant eye on its ability to influence responses to the dominant eye (i.e., on binocular interactions). The dominant eye was stimulated with the optimal spatial frequency for the cell being tested. For 22 of 45 cells tested, nondominant-eye stimulation had a statistically significant effect on the response to the dominant eye. Fourteen of these cells showed band-pass spatial-frequency sensitivity in the nondominant-eye influence, and eight showed low-pass spatial-frequency sensitivity. However, only 11 of the cells had statistically significant variations in their binocular interactions that depended on the orientation or direction of stimuli presented to the nondominant eye. Furthermore, even for those cells, the effect of varying orientation and direction was only about half as strong as the effect of varying spatial frequency. We conclude that binocular processing in the LGN, including responses to the nondominant eye and nondominant-eye influences on responses to the dominant eye, are affected significantly by the spatial frequency of the nondominant-eye stimulus and relatively little by stimulus orientation or direction of movement. The significance of these findings for understanding the functions of LGN binocular processing is discussed.
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    Experimental brain research 89 (1992), S. 682-685 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: EMG ; Hindlimb ; Kinesiology ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In the hindlimb muscle peroneus longus (PerL) of cats, electromyographic activity (EMG) was recorded from anterior and posterior regions during voluntary motor behaviour. In spite of the fact that this muscle is composed of units that all exert their forces in the same direction, the intra-muscular EMG distribution differed in a marked and reproducible way between different types of motor behaviour. Anterior as well as posterior regions were both strongly active in relation to the swing-phase of stepping. In comparison to this stepping-activity, there was a marked predominance of posterior PerL activity during hindlimb standing (or take-off for a jump) and an equally pronounced predominance of anterior PerL activity when the cat was preparing to land from being lifted (or at the end of a jump). It is suggested that these task-associated differences in EMG distribution reflect topographical aspects of the intraspinal organization of motor tasks.
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    Experimental brain research 90 (1992), S. 233-240 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Postsynaptic potentials ; Trigeminal motoneurons ; Jaw movements ; Palatal stimulation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Excitation and inhibition of temporal and digastric motoneurons (Temp. and Dig. Mns) during transient jaw closing, the so-called jaw-closing reflex, were studied in cats. Application of diffuse pressure stimulation to the posterior palatal surface produced the jaw-closing reflex and it was found that mechanosensory inputs from the posterior palatal mucosa produce depolarizing potentials on the Temp. Mns responsible for jaw closure during the jaw-closing reflex. We have demonstrated that in one-third of 27 explored Temp. Mns the initial bursts of spikes were elicited before the onset of jaw closure, suggesting that these cells contribute to initiate jaw closure during the jaw-closing reflex. The remaining cells probably contributed to maintain the occlusal phase. Furthermore, it was found that mechanosensory inputs from the posterior palatal mucosa produce a hyperpolarization-depolarization sequence in the Dig. Mns responsible for the jawclosing reflex. In addition, when pressure stimulation was applied to the anterior palatal mucosa, sustained jaw opening was elicited and an increase of firing frequency of Dig. Mns occurred 40 ms before the onset of jaw opening and continued for 80 ms.
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    Experimental brain research 91 (1992), S. 85-93 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Sensorimotor ; Somatosensory cortex ; Connectivity ; Corticocortical ; Fluorescent tracer ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Peripheral information reaches the motor cortex partly through corticocortical pathways that arise from two functional subdivisions, area 2 and area 3a, of the sensory cortex. These sensory areas are synaptically linked with one another. The patterns of connectivity and the different submodality input that each area receives suggest that they send different efferent signals to the motor cortex. The projections from area 2 to area 3a and to the motor cortex were studied with retrogradely transported fluorescent tracers. The pattern and distribution of neuronal labeling in area 2 was determined following injections of different tracers into the forelimb regions of area 3a and the motor cortex. The results showed that the projections from area 2 to the two target regions were topographically and somatotopically related. Multiple clusters of motor cortex projection neurons were found in area 2, and these clusters overlapped extensively with clusters of area 3a projection neurons. Although cells labeled with one of the dyes were often in close proximity to cells labeled with the other dye, no double-labeled cells were found. Two different laminar patterns were seen for the two populations of neurons. The projection to area 3a originated from cells located in layers II–III and layers V–VI. The projection to the motor cortex originated from cells spread throughout layers II–IV, but predominately in layer III. Differences in laminar arrangement of the two populations of cells suggest a directional flow of information processing in the sensorimotor cortex. While sensory feedback is essential for the execution of skilled motor tasks, the flow of information processing and connectivity in the cortex is not well understood. The data presented here offer insight into some aspects of the mechanisms of sensorimotor integration.
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    Experimental brain research 91 (1992), S. 435-454 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Frequency modulated sweep ; Binaural response ; Primary auditory cortex ; Direction selectivity ; Speed selectivity ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Monaural and binaural single unit responses to frequency-modulated (FM) sweeps were compared in cat primary auditory cortex (AI). Both upward-directed (changing from low to high frequency) and downward-directed (changing from high to low frequency) FM sweeps were presented monaurally and binaurally at five rates of frequency modulation (referred to here as the speed of FM sweep). Two types of binaural FM sweep conditions were presented: (1) like-directed FM sweeps, in which identical FM sweeps were presented to both ears, and (2) opposite-directed FM sweeps, in which one ear was presented with one direction of FM sweep while the other ear was simultaneously presented with the opposite direction of FM sweep. In a sample of 78 cells, 33 cells were classified as EE (binaural facilitatory) and 45 were classified as EI (binaural inhibitory). Ninety-four percent of all units were sensitive to the direction and/or speed of FM sweeps. In general, under binaural stimulus conditions, EE cells responded optimally to like-directed FM sweeps, while EI cells preferred opposite-directed FM sweeps. When tested monaurally, 59% of all cells (both EE and EI) were direction selective, with the majority (76%) preferring downward-directed FM sweeps. When tested binaurally, most direction selective EE cells (60%) preferred upward-directed FM sweeps, while the majority of direction selective EI cells (71%) preferred downward-directed FM sweeps. Our analysis also allowed us to classify inhibitory responses of EI cells as either direction selective (37%) or non-direction selective (63%). For FM speed selectivity under monaural conditions, most EE cells preferred fast FM sweep rates (0.4–0.8 kHz/ms), while approximately equal numbers of EI cells preferred either slow (i.e., 0.05–0.1 kHz/ms) or fast (i.e., 0.4–0.8 kHz/ms) speeds. Under binaural conditions, the majority of EE and EI cells responded best to high speeds when tested with like-directed FM sweeps, while the preferred speed with opposite-directed FM sweeps was more broadly tuned. The results suggest the presence of binaural neural mechanisms underlying cortical FM sweep direction and speed selectivity.
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 594-608 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Optokinetic reflex ; Vestibulo-ocular reflex ; Cortical lesion ; Areas 17, 18, 19 ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Binocular and monocular gain of optokinetic nystagmus (OKN), OKN dynamics, vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) and VOR adaptation were measured in 5 normal cats and in 5 cats which underwent bilateral visual cortical lesions involving the 17–18 complex at least 4 months before testing. We observed longterm deficits after bilateral lesions involving area 17 and variable parts of area 18 but failed to observe deficits after 18–19 lesions. These deficits were limited to the OKN gain and the build-up time constant of OKN; the VOR and the optokinetic after-nystagmus (OKAN) time constant were within normal limits. Our results suggest that areas 17–18 operate in parallel to control the encoding of retinal slip velocity at the level of the nucleus of the optic tract (NOT) and the accessory optic system (AOS), which are known to represent the initial stage of the optokinetic pathways.
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  • 133
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    Keywords: Locus coeruleus ; Kölliker-Fuse ; Raphe nuclei ; Synaptic transmission ; Spindle afferents ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The effects of brief trains of electrical stimuli applied within the locus coeruleus and subcoeruleus, the Kölliker-Fuse nucleus and the raphe magnus, obscurus and pallidus nuclei were tested on transmission from group I and group II muscle afferent fibres in mid-lumbar spinal segments of chloralose anaesthetized cats. Changes in the effectiveness of transmission from these afferents were assessed from changes in the size of monosynaptic extracellular field potentials evoked by them. The depression of group II field potentials occurred at conditioning-testing intervals of 20–400 ms, and was maximal at intervals of 40–100 ms and 30–60 ms for potentials recorded in the intermediate zone and dorsal horn, respectively. At intervals up to about 30 ms it was combined with the depression of group I components of the intermediate zone field potentials. However, at longer intervals the conditioning stimuli depressed group II components of these potentials as selectively as monoamines applied ionophoretically at the recording site (Bras et al., 1989a, 1990). Thus, only the late depressive actions are considered as being possibly mediated by impulses in descending noradrenergic and/or serotonergic fibres. No major differences were found in the relative degree of depression of transmission from group II afferents by stimulation of the locus coeruleus/subcoeruleus, Kölliker-Fuse or raphe nuclei, either in the dorsal horn or in the intermediate zone. Since field potentials at these locations are preferentially depressed by ionophoretic application of serotonin and noradrenaline (Bras et al., 1990), and since the locus coeruleus/subcoeruleus, Kölliker-Fuse and raphe nuclei are interconnected, the study leads to the conclusion that both noradrenergic and serotonergic descending pathways can be activated by stimuli applied within either of them. Selective depression of field potentials of group II origin was also evoked by stimulation at other sites, e.g. the periaqueductal grey and medullary reticular formation, when conditioning-testing intervals were sufficiently long. Such a depression is considered to be secondary to activation of neurones of the locus coeruleus/subcoeruleus, Kölliker-Fuse or raphe nuclei and attributed to the spread of current or transsynaptic activation of these neurones, or to stimulation of their axon collaterals outside the nuclei rather than to other descending medullo-spinal systems. The non-selective depression of field potentials evoked by group I and group II afferents at shorter conditioning-testing intervals is proposed to be due to actions of reticulo-spinal pathways.
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 551-559 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Thalamus ; Motor cortex ; Dorsal column nuclei ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary This study investigated the role of the ventral lateral (VL) nucleus of the thalamus as a lemniscal relay to motor cortex. Intracellular recordings were obtained from thalamic VL relay neurons in cats anesthetized with chloralose, following stimulation of the dorsal column nuclei. VL neurons were identified by their short-latency input from the cerebellar nuclei, their antidromic activation from motor cortex and their anatomical location. A total of 105 neurons was studied. The occurence of temporal facilitation to double volleys was also examined. It was found that 80/105 (75%) neurons responded with excitation and/or inhibition to stimulation of the dorsal column nuclei. The latencies of the postsynaptic responses ranged from 2.0 to 20 ms (median 10.0 ms). The latencies of nearly all responses (79/80) were 〉 3 ms and nearly all responses (45/47) which were tested for it, displayed temporal facilitation to double shock stimulation, consistent with polysynaptic transmission. Effective stimulation sites were found in the gracile and cuneate nuclei. Recording sites were located throughout VL, including the “border region” with the ventral posterior lateral nucleus (VPL). There was no obvious topographic relationship between location of recording site and latency or polarity (excitation versus inhibition) of the synaptic responses. This is consistent with dorsal column input diffusely distributed over VL. When the recording electrodes penetrated VPL, characteristics of the EPSPs were indicative of monosynaptic transmission (short latency, no temporal facilitation). This clear transition from VL to VPL suggests that it is not necessary to define, on physiological grounds, a separate “border region” between these two nuclei. The data provide evidence that dorsal column information reaches VL neurons polysynaptically, not monosynaptically. This indicates that VL is part of a long-latency, not short-latency path through the dorsal column nuclei to motor cortex.
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 580-593 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Forel's field H ; Reticular formation ; Reticulospinal neurones ; Neck motoneurones ; Head movements ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. We analysed the synaptic actions produced by Forel's field H (FFH) neurones on dorsal neck motoneurones and the pathways mediating the effects. 2. Stimulation of ipsilateral FFH induced negative field potentials of several hundred microvolts with the latency of about 1.1 ms in the medial ponto-medullary reticular formation, being largest in the ventral part of the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis (NRPC), and in the dorsal part of the nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis (NRG). 3. Stimulation of ipsilateral FFH induced excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in 90% (47/52) and inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) in 19% (10/52) of the reticulospinal neurones (RSNs) in the NRPC and the NRG. Latencies of the EPSPs and IPSPs were 0.7–3.0 ms, the majority of which were in the monosynaptic range. The monosynaptic connexions were confirmed by spike triggered averarging technique both in excitatory (n=4) and inhibitory (n=2) pathways. 4. Single stimulation of FFH induced EPSPs at the segmental latencies of 0.3–1.0 ms in neck motoneurones, which were clearly in the monosynaptic range. Repetitive stimulation of FFH produced marked temporal facilitation of EPSPs in neck motoneurones. The facilitated components of the EPSPs had a little longer latencies and their amplitude reached several times as large as that evoked by single stimulation in all the tested motoneurones. These facilitated excitations are assumed to be mediated by RSNs in the NRPC and NRG, since RSNs were mono- and polysynaptically fired by stimulation of FFH and they were previously shown to directly project to neck moteneurones. 5. EPSPs were induced in 91% (82/91) of motoneurones supplying m. biventer cervicis and complexus (BCC; head elevator), 10% (3/29) of motoneurones supplying m. splenius (SPL; lateral head flexor). Eikewise, stimulation of FFH produced EMG responses in BCC muscles, while not in SPL muscle. Thus FFH neurones produce excitations preferentially in BCC motoneurones. 6. Systematic tracking in and around FFH revealed that the effective sites for evoking above effects were in FFH and extended caudally along their efferent axonal course. 7. These results suggested that FFH neurones connect with neck motoneurones (chiefly BCC, head elevator) mono-, diand/or polysynaptically and are mainly concerned with the control of vertical head movements.
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  • 136
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    Experimental brain research 89 (1992), S. 140-146 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Fusimotor neurones ; Muscle spindles ; Spinal reflexes ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The effect of single shock stimulation, up to 20 × threshold (T), of the sural nerve on the discharges of triceps surae γ-efferents was investigated in decerebrate cats. Units were classified as static (12) or dynamic (7) on the basis of their resting discharge rates (Murphy et al. 1984). All neurones were excited at short latency by sural nerve stimulation and response size was graded with stimulus intensity. Short latency mixed or inhibitory responses were not evident. Although reflex effects first occurred at low stimulus strengths (〈-1.5T) in both types of efferent, most responses appeared at higher intensities (〉 1.5T). The estimated central delays of the responses of static (3.0 ±1.1 ms, mean± SD) and dynamic (3.4 ± 1.0 ms) γ-motoneurones were not significantly different and are consistent with spinal oligosynaptic pathways. The present results differ from those of the only previous study (Johansson and Sojka 1985) of the short latency responses of triceps surae static and dynamic γ-motoneurones to sural nerve stimulation, in which mixed and inhibitory effects were common in anaesthetised cats. Although differences in recording techniques and γ sampling may account for the apparent disparity between these studies, it is also feasible that a difference in the setting of interneuronal pathways in the two types of preparation is responsible. The results are discussed in relation to the control of γ-motoneurones with particular reference to the “final common input” hypothesis (Johansson 1981; Appelberg et al. 1983).
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  • 137
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    Experimental brain research 89 (1992), S. 333-340 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Animal model ; Vocalization ; Spectrograms ; Instrumental conditioning ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Attempts to understand the neural mechanisms underlying mammalian vocal behaviors, including speech, require study of the neural activity and anatomy of vocalization-controlling brain structures. Such studies necessitate the application of invasive neurobiological techniques in animal models. In the current study, cats are used in the development of an animal model of vocal tract control. The animals are instrumentally conditioned to vocalize for food reward. Acquisition of this task can occur within a few minutes, although additional training generally is required to solidly establish the behavior and to train subjects to produce consistently high rates of vocalization for prolonged periods of time. Following training, animals can generally sustain a rate of two calls per minute for a period of over two hours. Optimal task performance is partly dependent on motivation level. Although there is considerable variation between animals, the vocalizations produced have an average duration of 600 ms and a fundamental frequency of around 500 Hz. In addition, during a typical vocalization, there are dynamic variations of about 150 Hz for fundamental frequency and 17 dB for sound intensity. These variations provide opportunities for relating neural and muscular activity to different aspects of the vocal behavior they control. Based on a number of considerations, the model and techniques discussed here probably are most applicable to studying the neurobiology of sub-cortical nuclei subserving vocal control. Similar mechanisms might well be present in other species, including humans. Thus, data obtained from study of this model may be applicable to understanding the processes underlying vocal tract control during human speech.
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  • 138
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Spinal cord ; Inferior olivary nucleus ; Somatotopy ; Wheat germ agglutinin horseradish peroxidase ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Terminal sites of the spino-olivary fibers (SOFs) were examined by the anterograde transport of wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase in the cat. The tracer was injected at various spinal cord levels from the first cervical to the caudal segments. The SOFs derived from the C1-T1 segments terminated medially in the caudal half (levels II–VIII of Brodal) of the medial accessory olive (MAO), which projects to the A zone of the cerebellar cortex, whereas the SOFs derived from the L6-S1 segments terminated laterally in the caudal half (levels I–VIII) of the MAO. No projections were found from the T2-L5 segments to the MAO. In the dorsal accessory olive (DAO), the SOFs terminated at levels III–XIV; the DAO projects to the B zone and the C1 and C3 zones of the cerebellar cortex. The SOFs derived from the C1-C4 segments terminated in the most medial part of the DAO (levels III–XIV), followed laterally by those from the C5-T1 segments. Further laterally, the SOFs derived from the T2-L5 and the L6-S1 segments terminated in the mediolateral order at levels V–XIV. The SOFs from the L6-S1 segments occupied the most lateral part of the DAO. The present study demonstrates that there is a distinct somatotopic termination of the SOFs in the mediolateral order in the caudal MAO and the DAO.
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  • 139
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Respiratory neurons ; Apneusis ; Rhythmogenesis ; Excitatory amino acid ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Our aim was to study the mechanisms producing the transition from the inspiratory phase to the expiratory phase of the breathing cycle. For this purpose we observed the changes affecting the discharge patterns and excitabilities of the different types of respiratory neurons within the respiratory network in cat medulla, after inducing an apneustic respiration with the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonist MK-801 given systemically. Respiratory neurons were recorded extracellularly through the central barrel of multibarrelled electrodes, in the ventral respiratory area of pentobarbital-anesthetized, vagotomized, paralyzed and ventilated cats. Inhibitions exerted on each neuron by the presynaptic pools of respiratory neurons were revealed when the neuron was depolarized by an iontophoretic application of the excitatory amino-acid analogue quisqualate. Cycle-triggered time histograms of the spontaneous and quisqualate-increased discharge of respiratory neurons were constructed in eupnea and in apneusis induced with MK-801. During apneustic breathing, the activity of the respiratory neuronal network changed throughout the entire respiratory cycle including the post-inspiratory phase, and the peak discharge rates of all types of respiratory neurons, except the late-expiratory type, decreased. During apneusis, the activity of the post-inspiratory neuronal pool, the post-inspiratory depression of other respiratory neurons, and the phrenic nerve after-discharge were reduced (but not totally suppressed), whereas the discharge of some post-inspiratory neurons shifted into the apneustic plateau. The shortened post-inspiration (stage 1 of expiration) altered the organization of the expiratory phase. Late-expiratory neurons (stage 2 of expiration) discharged earlier in expiration and their discharge rate increased. The inspiratory on-switching was functionally unaffected. Early inspiratory neurons of the decrementing type retained a decrementing pattern followed by a reduced discharge rate in the apneustic plateau, whereas early-inspiratory neurons of the constant type maintained a high discharge rate throughout the apneustic plateau. Inspiratory augmenting neurons, late-inspiratory and “offswitch” neurons also discharged throughout the apneustic plateau. During the apneustic plateau, the level of activity was constant in the phrenic nerve and in inspiratory neurons of the early-constant, augmenting, and late types. However, progressive changes in the activity of other neuronal types demonstrated the evolving state of the respiratory network in the plateau phase. There was a slowed but continued decrease of the activity of early-inspiratory decrementing neurons, accompanied by an increasing activity and/or excitability of “off-switch”, postinspiratory and late-expiratory neurons. In apneusis there was a decoupling of the duration of inspiration and expiration. The variability of inspiratory duration increased five-fold whereas the variability of expiration was unchanged. We conclude that in the apneustic state, (1) inspiratory on-switching and the successive activation of the different inspiratory neuronal types are preserved; (2) near the end of the inspiratory ramp, the reversible phase of inspiratory off-switching is prolonged, producing the apneustic plateau, and (3) the irreversible phase of offswitching is impaired by a reduced activity of postinspiratory neurons. These results support the 3-phase model of respiratory rhythm generation, in which key roles are played by early-inspiratory and post-inspiratory neurons.
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  • 140
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    Experimental brain research 90 (1992), S. 369-374 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Muscle spindle ; Fusimotor ; Extrafusal ; Motor unit ; Contraction ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Normally, γ motoneurones innervate only the intrafusal fibres of muscle spindles. This is a report of sprouting of γ motoneurones to innervate extrafusal muscle fibres following partial denervation of the soleus muscle of kittens. In eight newborn animals, the L7 ventral root was cut on one side under anaesthesia and the animals were then allowed to recover. At approximately 100 days of age animals were reanaesthetised and a study made of mechanical properties of motor units whose axons ran in the S1 ventral root and supplied the partially denervated soleus muscle. Evidence was obtained for sprouting of all surviving α motoneurones. In addition, in four experiments axons conducting within the γ range, on stimulation, produced measurable tension. In one experiment, stimulation of one such γ axon also produced specific fusimotor effects on four afferents identified as coming from primary endings of muscle spindles. The γ axon was therefore a fusimotor axon. The effect observed on stimulation of the γ axon suggested a largely dynamic action. Other examples of γ axons were encountered that on stimulation produced tension, but which could not be specifically associated with spindles. In addition, a number of γ axons that did not develop tension were shown, on stimulation, to have fusimotor effects that were static in action. It is concluded that in extensively denervated muscles γ motoneurones may sometimes sprout to innervate extrafusal fibres. The mechanical properties of the extrafusal fibres innervated by such γ axons were similar to those of ordinary α motor units.
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  • 141
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Afterhyperpolarisation ; Motoneurone ; Fictive locomotion ; Repetitive firing ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Repetitive firing of motoneurones was examined in decerebrate, unanaesthetised, paralysed cats in which fictive locomotion was induced by stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region. Repetitive firing produced by sustained intracellular current injection was compared with repetitive firing observed during fictive locomotion in 17 motoneurones. During similar interspike intervals, the afterhyperpolarisations (AHPs) during fictive locomotion were decreased in amplitude compared to the AHPs following action potentials produced by sustained depolarising current injections. Action potentials were evoked in 10 motoneurones by the injection of short duration pulses of depolarising current throughout the step cycles. When compared to the AHPs evoked at rest, the AHPs during fictive locomotion were reduced in amplitude at similar membrane potentials. The post-spike trajectories were also compared in different phases of the step cycle. The AHPs following these spikes were reduced in amplitude particularly in the depolarised phases of the step cycles. The frequency-current (f-I) relations of 7 motoneurones were examined in the presence and absence of fictive locomotion. Primary ranges of firing were observed in all cells in the absence of fictive locomotion. In most cells (6/7), however, there was no relation between the amount of current injected and the frequency of repetitive firing during fictive locomotion. In one cell, there was a large increase in the slope of the f-I relation. It is suggested that this increase in slope resulted from a reduction in the AHP conductance; furthermore, the usual elimination of the relation is consistent with the suggestions that the repetitive firing in motoneurones during fictive locomotion is not produced by somatic depolarisation alone, and that motoneurones do not behave as simple input-output devices during this behaviour. The correlation of firing level with increasing firing frequency which has previously been demonstrated during repetitive firing produced by afferent stimulation or by somatic current injection is not present during fictive locomotion. This lends further support to the suggestion that motoneurone repetitive firing during fictive locomotion is not produced or regulated by somatic depolarisation. It is suggested that although motoneurones possess the intrinsic ability to fire repetitively in response to somatic depolarisation, the nervous system need not rely on this ability in order to produce repetitive firing during motor acts. This capability to modify or bypass specific motoneuronal properties may lend the nervous system a high degree of control over its motor output.
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  • 142
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Presynaptic inhibition ; Primary afferent depolarization ; Baclofen ; GABA ; Spinal cord ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The purpose of the present series of experiments was to analyze, in anesthetized and paralyzed cats, the effects of (-)-baclofen and picrotoxin on the primary afferent depolarization (PAD) generated in single Ib afferent fibers by either intraspinal microstimulation or stimulation of the segmental and descending pathways. PAD was estimated by recording dorsal root potentials and by measuring the changes in the intraspinal activation threshold of single Ib muscle afferent fibers. The PAD elicited by stimulation of group I muscle or cutaneous afferents was readily depressed and often abolished 20–40 min after the intravenous injection of 1–2 mg/kg (-)-baclofen. In contrast, the same amounts of (-)-baclofen produced a relatively small depression of the PAD elicited by stimulation of the brainstem reticular formation (RF). The monosynaptic PAD produced in single Ib fibers by intraspinal microstimulation within the intermediate nucleus was depressed and sometimes abolished following the i.v. injections of 1–2 mg/kg (-)-baclofen. Twenty to forty minutes after the i.v. injection of picrotoxin (0.5–1 mg/kg), there was a strong depression of the PAD elicited by stimulation of muscle and cutaneous afferents as well as of the PAD produced by stimulation of the RF and the PAD produced by intraspinal microstimulation. The results obtained suggest that, in addition to its action on primary afferents, (-)-baclofen may depress impulse activity and/or transmitter release in a population of last-order GABAergic interneurons that mediate the PAD of Ib fibers. The existence of GABAb autoreceptors in last-order interneurons mediating the PAD may function as a self-limiting mechanism controlling the synaptic efficacy of these interneurons.
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  • 143
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    Experimental brain research 91 (1992), S. 115-120 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Auditory cortex ; Tone ; Inhibition ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The extra- and intracellular responses of 262 neurons in A1 to tones of best frequency with durations ranging from 10 ms to 1.2 min were studied acute experiments on ketamine-anesthetized cats. Following the generation of action potentials in response to the tone stimulus, inhibition of both the background and the auditory stimulus-evoked spike activity were observed in 91% of the investigated neurons. The duration of this inhibition corresponded to the stimulus duration. For the remaining neurons (9%) an inhibition of the stimulus-evoked spike activity alone was seen, also corresponding to the stimulus duration. Maximal inhibition of the spike activity occurred for the first 100–200 ms of the inhibitory response (the period which equalled the time of development of an IPSP in a cell). During this period of IPSP development, the membrane resistance of the neuron was reduced to 60–90% of its initial value. Varying the duration of the acoustic signal within a range of 10–200 ms was accompanied by a change in the IPSP duration and inhibition of the spike acitivity of the neuron. Whenever the tone lasted more than 200 ms, the membrane potential of the neuron was restored to the resting potential. However, during this period, the responsiveness of the neuron was lower than that initially observed. Measurement of the membrane resistance during the inhibitory pause that was not accompanied by hyperpolarization produced an index with an average 17% lower than the initial value for 87% of the neurons. The data indicate that inhibition of the spike activity in Al neurons evoked by tone stimuli of various durations is due to the appearance of postsynaptic inhibition on their membrane. It is concluded that the time course of the cortical inhibitory input to neurons is the major factor determining variations in duration of the inhibition of response of auditory cortex neurons to an auditory stimulus.
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  • 144
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Motoneurons ; Post-synaptic potential ; Sural nerve ; Recruitment ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In cat medial gastrocnemius motoneurons, single stimuli to the cutaneous sural nerve evoke a post-synaptic potential with a mixture of depolarization and hyperpolarization, depolarization being dominant in type F cells and hyperpolarization in type S cells. This pattern is consistent with previous reports showing that activation of the sural nerve can sometimes reverse the normal order of motor unit recruitment by inhibiting S motor units while simultaneously exciting F motor units. However, during repetitive stimulation for 1–2 s, we found that the hyperpolarizing component of the sural input to medial gastrocnemius motoneurons was not persistent, but instead gave way to depolarization after the first 30 ms. The net steady-state response after 0.5–1.0 s of stimulation was depolarization in all cells, regardless of motor unit type. This suggests that tonic sural input may be incapable of producing prolonged recruitment reversals.
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  • 145
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    Experimental brain research 91 (1992), S. 273-283 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pretectum ; Jerk neurons ; Saccades ; Visual stimuli ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The activity of ‘jerk neurons’ was recorded extracellularly in the pretectum of the awake cat. The characteristic response of jerk neurons was a short, high-frequency burst that occurred after fast movements (‘jerks’) of a large, structured visual stimulus, during saccadic eye movements in the light, and after ‘on’ or ‘off’ visual stimulation. Mean burst latency to pure visual ‘jerks’ was 50 ms, whereas it was 30 ms to saccadic eye movements. Bursts were found to be stereotyped; the highest discharge rate was always at burst onset. Jerk neurons were not selective for stimulus parameters (such as movement amplitude or direction) except that in some neurons a weak correlation between stimulus velocity and discharge frequency was found. During saccades in the dark, clear bursts were only rarely found. In about half of the neurons, however, there was a slight but significant increase in the number of spikes above spontaneous frequency. Visual receptive fields were very large (46° horizontal and 35° vertical extent, on average). Nevertheless, the pretectal jerk neurons showed a rough retinotopic order, which was in accordance with the published retinotopy of the pretectum. Jerk neurons were found throughout the whole superficial pretectum, but preferentially in an area that corresponds to the nucleus of the optic tract (NOT) and the nucleus pretectalis posterior (NPP). Saccades were elicited by electrical stimulations at the sites where jerk neurons were recorded. The direction of the elicited saccades depended strongly on the pretectal stimulation site. A possible role of the jerk neurons as a visuomotor relay to elicit saccades or to modulate perception and attention is discussed.
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  • 146
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: GAP-43 ; In situ hybridization ; Spinal cord ; Axotomy ; Rat ; Cat ; Monkey
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In situ hybridization histochemistry was used to detect cell bodies expressing mRNA encoding for the phosphoprotein GAP-43 in the lumbosacral spinal cord of the adult rat, cat and monkey under normal conditions and, in the cat and rat, also after different types of lesions. In the normal spinal cord, a large number of neurons throughout the spinal cord gray matter were found to express GAP-43 mRNA. All neurons, both large and small, in the motor nucleus (Rexed's lamina IX) appeared labeled, indicating that both alpha and gamma motoneurons express GAP-43 mRNA under normal conditions. After axotomy by an incision in the ventral funiculus or a transection of ventral roots or peripheral nerves, GAP-43 mRNA was clearly upregulated in axotomized motoneurons, including both alpha and gamma motoneurons. An increase in GAP-43 mRNA expression was already detectable 24 h postoperatively in lumbar motoneurons both after a transection of the sciatic nerve at knee level and after a transection of ventral roots. At this time, a stronger response was seen in the motoneurons which had been subjected to the distal sciatic nerve transection than was apparent for the more proximal ventral root lesion. An upregulation of GAP-43 mRNA could also be found in intact motoneurons located on the side contralateral to the lesion, but only after a peripheral nerve transection, indicating that the concomitant influence of dorsal root afferents may play a role in GAP-43 mRNA regulation. However, a dorsal root transection alone did not seem to have any detectable influence on the expression of GAP-43 mRNA in spinal motoneurons, while the neurons located in the superficial laminae of the dorsal horn responded with an upregulation of GAP-43 mRNA. The presence of high levels of GAP-43 in neurons has been correlated with periods of axonal growth during both development and regeneration. The role for GAP-43 in neurons under normal conditions is not clear, but it may be linked with events underlying remodelling of synaptic relationships or transmitter release. Our findings provide an anatomical substrate to support such a hypothesis in the normal spinal cord, and indicate a potential role for GAP-43 in axon regeneration of the motoneurons, since GAP-43 mRNA levels was strongly upregulated following both peripheral axotomy and axotomy within the spinal cord. The upregulation of GAP-43 mRNA found in contralateral, presumably uninjured motoneurons after peripheral nerve transection, as well as in dorsal horn neurons after a dorsal root transection, indicates that GAP-43 levels are altered not only as a direct consequence of a lesion, but also after changes in the synaptic input to the neurons.
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  • 147
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual cortex ; Norepinephrine ; Acetylcholine ; Critical and sensitive periods ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Monocular deprivation (MD) of young kittens decreases the response of visual cortex cells to the deprived eye. In addition, it causes cell shrinkage in the layers of the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) innervated by the deprived eye. To determine whether the shrinkage of LGN cells is dependent upon changes in the response of cortical cells, we compared LGN cell shrinkage in three groups of MD animals. Two were controls; the third received lesions of fibers bringing norepinephrine and acetylcholine to the visual cortex. This procedure greatly attenuated the effect of MD on the visual cortex. The amount of LGN cell shrinkage did not differ among the three groups. We conclude that LGN shrinkage after MD does not require a dramatic loss of cortical cell responses to the deprived eye.
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  • 148
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    Experimental brain research 92 (1992), S. 105-122 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Primary auditory cortex ; Intensity ; Isofrequency domain ; Topography ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The neuronal response to tones as a function of intensity was topographically studied with multiple-unit recordings in the primary auditory cortex (AI) of barbiturate-anesthetized cats. The spatial distribution of the characteristics of rate/level functions was determined in each of three intensely studied cases and their relationship to the distribution of spectral parameters (sharpness of tuning and responses to broadband transients) in the same animals was determined. The growth of the high-intensity portion of rate/level functions was estimated by linear regression. Locations with monotonically growing high-intensity portions were spatially segregated from locations with nonmonotonic rate/level functions. Two noncontiguous areas with a high degree of non-monotonicity were observed. One was located at the dorsoventral center of AI, and a second in the dorsal third of AI. The more ventral aggregate of high non-monotonicity coincided with the region of sharp frequency tuning. The stimulus levels that produced the highest firing rate (strongest response level, SRL) at any sampled location ranged from 10 to 80 dB sound pressure level (SPL). Several spatial aggregates with either high or low SRLs were observed in AI. The region of sharpest tuning was always associated with a region of low SRLs. The response threshold to contralateral tones at the characteristic frequency (CF) ranged from — 10 dB SPL to 85 dB SPL with the majority between 0 and 40 dB SPL. The spatial distribution of response thresholds indicated several segregated areas containing clusters with either higher or lower response thresholds. The correlation of response threshold with integrated bandwidth and transient responses was only weak. Low- and high-intensity tones of the same frequency are represented at different locations in AI as judged by the amount of evoked neuronal activity and are largely independent of the frequency organization. The spatial distribution of locations with high monotonicity and low strongest response levels were aligned with the organization of the integrated excitatory bandwidth and covaried with the response strength to broadband stimuli.
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  • 149
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Somatosensory thalamus ; Vibrotactile sensation ; Tactile neurons ; Vibration coding ; Glabrous skin ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Responses of neurons in the ventroposterolateral nucleus of the thalamus to vibration applied to the forelimb footpads were analyzed in anesthetized cats in order to describe the signalling properties of thalamic neurons that received input from the different classes of tactile afferents innervating the glabrous skin of the distal forelimb. Seventy-six thalamic neurons, the majority of which (60 of 76) were positively identified as thalamocortical projection neurons, were classified into two broad groups according to their responses to 1-s step indentations of the skin. A minority (24%) comprised neurons that had slowly adapting (SA) responses, whereas the remainder (76%), the dynamically sensitive neurons, had transient responses to the onset and offset phase of the step and were further classified according to their sensitivity to cutaneous vibrotactile stimuli into those activated by low-frequency vibration (rapidly adapting, RA, neurons) and those activated by high frequencies (Pacinian afferent, PC, neurons). Thalamic RA neurons displayed phaselocked responses to vibration at frequencies up to ∼100 Hz, while PC neurons displayed phaselocked responses to vibration up to 400–500 Hz. Thalamic SA neurons varied in their responses to vibrotactile stimuli; half were most sensitive to vibration frquencies of 50 Hz or less, while the others responded over a broader range of frequencies. Although three major classes of footpad-related thalamic neurons were identified, there was evidence of convergent input to a small proportion of them. The study demonstrates that thalamic neurons have the capacity for responding to cutaneous vibration with phaselocked, patterned impulse trains, which would enable them to encode information about vibrotactile frequencies up to ∼ 300 Hz.
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  • 150
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 41-58 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Head movement ; Electromyography ; Muscle activity ; Cervical vertebrae ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Natural head movements in alert, unrestrained cats were studied using video-filming, videofluoroscopy and electromyographic (EMG) recording methods. In each cat, up to sixteen neck muscles or neck-muscle compartments were implanted with recording electrodes. Patterns of muscle recruitment were examined during systematically-selected behavioral epochs in which the cat held a range of stationary postures, and when it performed volitional and exploratory behaviors such as flexion-extension or turning, grooming, eating, or headshaking. Patterns of muscular activity were interpreted with reference to simultaneous video images of head and neck movements. In separate, videofluoroscopic analysis, flexion-extension movements were examined to gain insight into the underlying movements of the skull and cervical vertebrae. These and other movements were found commonly to depend upon changes in joint angles between lower as well as upper cervical joints. Stationary postures in which the neck was held vertically were consistently associated with tonic EMG activity in only two long dorsal muscles, biventer cervicis and occipitoscapularis. Less consistent activity was also present in dorsal intervertebral muscles crossing lower cervical joints. When the neck was held horizontally, the long dorsal muscles increased their EMG activity and moderate activity was also recorded in deeper intervertebral and suboccipital muscles. When flexion-extension occurred around upper cervical joints, greatest activity was recorded in rectus capitis posterior and complexus, but when it involved the lower cervical joints, large changes in EMG activity could also be detected in biventer cervicis, occipitoscapularis, and the intervertebral muscles crossing lower cervical joints. During specialized, sagittal-plane movements such as grooming, well-defined patterns of synergy could be recognized that varied according to the degree of involvement of upper and lower cervical joint-sets. Movements in the horizontal plane were associated with EMG activity in a largely different subset of neck muscles including splenius, longissimus capitis and obliquus capitis inferior. The levels of EMG activity during flexion-extension or turning movements were much lower than those observed during other more vigorous behaviors, such as head shaking. Some neck muscles, such as clavotrapezius and sternomastoideus, could only be recruited during forceful or ballistic head movements. Results showed that the patterns of muscular activation were linked not only to the speed and trajectory of the movements of the skull, but also to the kinematics of the motion occurring across different parts of the cervical column.
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  • 151
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 411-421 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Motor unit ; Multi-tendoned muscle ; Mechanical partitioning ; Mechanical cross-coupling ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In anesthetized cats single motor units (MUs) of the extensor carpi ulnaris (ECU) and extensor digitorum communis (EDC) muscles were selectively activated by stimulation of cervical ventral root filaments. The distribution of force developed by single MUs at the four distal tendons of the EDC muscle and at three portions of the distal tendon of the ECU muscle was analysed. In general, single MUs of both muscles distributed force over all tendons in a unimodal pattern, with the maximal force levels generated at one specific tendon which was termed the best-tendon. Distributions of force were quantitatively described by a parameter representing the mean direction of force output (output-index) and a further one representing the dispersion of force over the distal tendons (divergence). Generally, these parameters and the best-tendon remained stable when a MU was stimulated at different frequencies, but varied from MU to MU. Despite the general stability of the force distribution, slight systematic changes were regularly found in EDC MUs, when they developed a higher amount of force due to a higher frequency of stimulation: the relative amount of force at the best-tendon increased; e.g. the MUs got more selective for the best-tendon. These changes were partly due to overcoming mechanical cross-coupling between neighbouring compartments of the EDC muscle. Such changes of force distribution were only found in a part of the ECU MUs; other ECU MUs did not change their force distribution at all or became less selective for the best-tendon. The phenomenon that MUs of multi-tendoned muscles distribute their force output to the distal tendons in specific patterns is probably due to mechanical partitioning of the parent muscles: the localization of spatial territories of MUs within different anatomical muscle compartments should correspond to the best-tendon. Complex mechanisms allowing passive transmission of force from limited territories along the transverse axis of both muscles must be assumed in order to explain why most MUs act on all tendons and why force distributions change with increasing stimulus frequency. In addition, specific relations between unit type and force distributions were found within both muscles. Fatigue-resistant EDC MUs have broader force distributions than fatigue-sensitive EDC MUs and slow ECU MUs were found to act predominantly on the most ulnar part of the distal tendon. These biomechanical properties of MUs are discussed as supporting the specific functions of the respective muscles.
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  • 152
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    Experimental brain research 88 (1992), S. 563-579 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Forel's field H ; Diencephalon ; Reticular formation ; Neck motoneurone ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Descending projections from Forel's field H (FFH) to the brain stem and upper cervical spinal cord were studied in cats. 2. Following implantation of HRP pellets into the spinal gray matter (C1-C3) or in the ponto-medullary reticular formation, the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis (NRPC) or in the nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis (NRG), numerous neurones were retrogradely labelled in FFH on the ipsilateral side. In the former cases, the sizes of labelled neurones were medium-large (20μ40 μm in diametre) while both small and medium-large neurones were labelled in the latter cases. 3. The lowest levels of spinal projection of single FFH neurones (n=70) were assessed by antidromic spikes elicited by stimulating electrodes placed in C1, C3 and C7. The majority (59%) projected to C1 (but not to C3), about 27% to C3 (but not to C7), and only 14% to C7. 4. Axonal trajectories of single FFH neurones in C1-C3 segments were investigated by antidromic threshold mapping methods. The stem axons of spinal-projecting FFH neurones descended in the ventral or in the ventrolateral funicli and the collaterals were projected to neck motor nuclei (lamina IX, Rexed 1954) and laminae V–VIII. The conduction velocities were estimated as 8–37 m/s from the antidromic latencies. 5. Axonal trajectories of 7 FFH neurones were investigated in the ponto-medullary reticular formation. All were antidromically activated from C1. In six neurones, the stem axons were located in the ventral part of the central tegmental tract and collaterals were projected to the NRPC and/or the NRG. Some of them projected to the inferior olive and the nucleus prepositus hypoglossi as well. The stem axon, in the remaining cell, was in the most dorso-medial part of the medial longitudinal fasciculus and collaterals were projected mainly to the dorsal part of the NRPC and the NRG, and also to the medial vestibular nucleus. 6. Anterograde transport of WGA-HRP injected into FFH revealed that in the upper cervical spinal cord, stem axons were found in the ventral funiculus and ventral part of the lateral funiculus. Collateral projections and presumed bouton-like deposits were observed in the laminae VI–IX, especially in their medial part. In the brain stem, dense bundles of the descending fibres were found in the central and the medial tegmental tracts and in the medial longitudinal fasciculus. FFH neurones projected densely to the caudal half of the NRPC and to the rostral half of the NRG. Extremely dense projections to the inferior olive were noted.
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  • 153
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    Experimental brain research 89 (1992), S. 147-156 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Walking ; Interlimb coordination ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary On the basis of behavioural studies the influences that coordinate the movement of the legs of a slowly walking cat have been investigated. The recording method applied here allows for the measurement of forward and backward movement of the legs which are called swing and stance movements, respectively. Influences etween contralateral legs, i.e. both front legs or both hind legs, are stronger than those occurring between ipsilateral legs, i.e. front and hind leg of the same side. Influences which coordinate the front legs seem to be of the same kind as those for the hind legs. These influences are symmetrical, which means that the same type of influence acts from right to left leg and in the reverse direction. Two types of influences are described for contralateral legs: 1. When the influencing leg performs a swing movement, the influenced leg is prevented from starting a swing movement. 2. When the influencing leg performs a stance movement, the probability that the influenced leg starts a swing movement increases as the influencing leg moves backwards during its stance movement. In contrast to contralateral coupling, the ipsilateral influences are asymmetric, i.e. a different influence acts from front to hind leg than does in the reverse direction. The front leg is influenced to start a swing when both legs have approached each other to a given value. The hind leg is influenced to start a stance movement after the front leg has begun its swing.
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  • 154
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    Experimental brain research 89 (1992), S. 323-332 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vestibular system ; Raphe nuclei ; Spinal cord ; Sympathetic nervous system ; Vestibulosympa ; thetic reflex ; Orthostatic hypotension ; Cardiovascular regulation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In the decerebrate cat, recordings were made from neurons in the caudal medullary raphe nuclei to determine if they responded to electrical stimulation of the vestibular nerve and thus might participate in vestibulo-sympathetic reflexes. Many of these cells projected to the upper thoracic spinal cord. The majority (20/28) of raphespinal neurons with conduction velocities between 1 and 4 m/s received vestibular inputs; 13 of the 20 were inhibited, and 7 were excited. Since many raphespinal neurons with similar slow conduction velocities are involved in the control of sympathetic outflow, as well as in other functions, these cells could potentially relay vestibular signals to sympathetic preganglionic neurons. The onset latency of the vestibular effects was long (median of 15 ms), indicating the inputs were polysynaptic. In addition, 34 of 42 raphespinal neurons with more rapid conduction velocities (6–78 m/s) also received long-latency (median of 10 ms) labyrinthine inputs; 26 were excited and 8 were inhibited. Although little is known about these rapidlyconducting cells, they do not appear to be involved in autonomic control, suggesting that the function of vestibular inputs to raphe neurons is not limited to production of vestibulosympathetic reflexes. One hypothesis is that raphe neurons are also involved in modulating the gain of vestibulocollic and vestibulospinal reflexes; this possibility remains to be tested.
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  • 155
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    Experimental brain research 89 (1992), S. 341-351 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Parabrachial region ; Vocalization ; Single-unit ; recordings ; Multiple-unit recordings ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The parabrachial nucleus in mammals is intimately connected with other vocalization controlling brainstem structures. It, along with ventromedially adjacent structures, also has been identified as the pneumotaxic center, and as such shows strong respiratory related activity in the anesthetized cat. The current study examines the neuronal activity in cat parabrachial regions during production of instrumentally conditioned vocalizations. Most of the units in our sample show considerable activity during periods between vocalizations. For many units, firing rate fluctuates during the respiratory cycle, although apparently not as strongly as reported in the decerebrate cat. Also, there is often strong phasic activity during periods where animals are licking to ingest their food rewards. During the peri-vocalization period, various neural activity patterns can be recorded. Most common is an activity increase during the vocalization itself. Moreover, in some units, this activity increase has an auditory component. A smaller number of units show other activity patterns, including a suppression of activity during vocalization and activity increases preceding the vocalization. Overall, our results suggest that the parabrachial region's involvement in vocal control is quite complex, involving convergence of respiratory, acoustic, vocalization-related, and perhaps somatosensory influences.
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  • 156
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    Experimental brain research 90 (1992), S. 241-252 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Parietal cortex ; Thalamus ; Cerebellar nucleus ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The characteristics of cerebellar input to the parietal cortex through the ventroanterior-ventrolateral (VA-VL) complex of the thalamus were investigated in the adult cat by using combined electrophysiological and anatomical methods. Two distinct parietal regions were activated by stimulation of the cerebellar nuclei (CN). In the first region located in the depth of the bank of the ansate sulcus, stimulation of the CN induced early surface positive-deep negative potentials and late surface negative-deep positive potentials. In this cortical area, potentials of similar shape and time course were evoked at a shorter latency by stimulation of the ventrolateral part of the VA-VL complex where large negative field potentials were evoked by stimulation of the CN. After injection of the anterograde tracer Phaseolus vulgaris leucoagglutinin (PHA-L) in this part of the VA-VL complex, axon terminals of thalamocortical (TC) fibers were found in layers I, III and IV in the depth of the bank of the ansate sulcus and layers I and III in the motor cortex. In the second region located in the suprasylvian gyrus, late surface negative-deep positive potentials were evoked by stimulation of the CN and similar potentials were evoked at a shorter latency from the dorsomedial part of the VA-VL complex where large cerebellar-evoked potentials could be recorded. PHA-L injection in this thalamic region stained TC fibers and their terminals in layer I of the suprasylvian gyrus, and in layers I and III of the motor cortex. The laminar distribution of TC axon terminals in two different regions of the parietal cortex could account for the depth profiles of the cerebellar- and the thalamic-evoked potentials in each region. These results show that cerebellar information is conveyed to two separate areas in the parietal cortex by two different TC pathways.
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  • 157
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    Experimental brain research 90 (1992), S. 153-162 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Respiration ; Neurons ; Axonal projections ; Spinal cord ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Axonal projections and synaptic connectivity of upper cervical inspiratory neurons (UCINs) were investigated in anaesthetised cats to clarify their role as propriospinal respiratory interneurons. Antidromic mapping showed axonal collaterals near phrenic and intercostal motonuclei. Of the UCINs tested, 37% had collaterals at T3-4; 55% had ipsilateral projections and 45% had contralateral projections. Ipsilateral or contralateral cross-correlations of the activity of pairs of UCINs (one on each side of the spinal cord) with the discharge of internal intercostal, external intercostal (T3-4) or phrenic nerves revealed similar features. Those with the internal intercostal and phrenic nerves were interpreted as evidence for shared or oligosynaptic excitation, those with the external intercostal nerve as shared excitation and inhibition. No evidence for monosynaptic connections was found. Monosynaptic connections could also not be demonstrated between inspiratory intercostal neurons located near (〈 0.5 mm) the UCINs collateral arborizations in T3-4, examined by cross-correlation. Afferent feedback from internal intercostal nerves (T3-4) was investigated by cross-correlating nerve stimulation with UCINs activity. Ipsilateral and contralateral cross-correlograms had similar features, providing evidence for excitation in some cases and inhibition in others. Finally, cross-correlations between ipsilateral UCINs and cervical sympathetic nerves were featureless. The results suggest that the role of UCINs as part of a respiratory propriospinal control system analagous to forelimb motor control is untenable, although they may be part of an intercostal afferent feedback loop.
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  • 158
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    Experimental brain research 91 (1992), S. 191-206 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Eye-head coordination ; Stabilizing reflexes ; Visual and otolith systems ; Sinusoidal linear motion ; Neck muscles ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The otolith contribution and otolith-visual interaction in eye and head stabilization were investigated in alert cats submitted to sinusoidal linear accelerations in three defined directions of space: up-down (Z motion), left-right (Y motion), and forward-back (X motion). Otolith stimulation alone was performed in total darkness with stimulus frequency varying from 0.05 to 1.39 Hz at a constant half peak-to-peak amplitude of 0.145 m (corresponding acceleration range 0.0014–1.13 g) Optokinetic stimuli were provided by sinusoidally moving a pseudorandom visual pattern in the Z and Y directions, using a similar half peak-to-peak amplitude (0.145 m, i.e., 16.1°) in the 0.025–1.39 Hz frequency domain (corresponding velocity range 2.5°–141°/s). Congruent otolith-visual interaction (costimulation, CS) was produced by moving the cat in front of the earth-stationary visual pattern, while conflicting interaction was obtained by suppressing all visual motion cues during linear motion (visual stabilization method, VS, with cat and visual pattern moving together, in phase). Electromyographic (EMG) activity of antagonist neck extensor (splenius capitis) and flexor (longus capitis) muscles as well as horizontal and vertical eye movements (electrooculography, EOG) were recorded in these different experimental conditions. Results showed that otolith-neck (ONR) and otolith-ocular (OOR) responses were produced during pure otolith stimulation with relatively weak stimuli (0.036 g) in all directions tested. Both EMG and EOG response gain slightly increased, while response phase lead decreased (with respect to stimulus velocity) as stimulus frequency increased in the range 0.25–1.39 Hz. Otolith contribution to compensatory eye and neck responses increased with stimulus frequency, leading to EMG and EOG responses, which oppose the imposed displacement more and more. But the otolith system alone remained unable to produce perfect compensatory responses, even at the highest frequency tested. In contrast, optokinetic stimuli in the Z and Y directions evoked consistent and compensatory eye movement responses (OKR) in a lower frequency range (0.025–0.25 Hz). Increasing stimulus frequency induced strong gain reduction and phase lag. Oculo-neck coupling or eye-head synergy was found during optokinetic stimulation in the Z and Y directions. It was characterized by bilateral activation of neck extensors and flexors during upward and downward eye movements, respectively, and by ipsilateral activation of neck muscles during horizontal eye movements. These visually-induced neck responses seemed related to eye velocity signals. Dynamic properties of neck and eye responses were significantly improved when both inputs were combined (CS). Near perfect compensatory eye movement and neck muscle responses closely related to stimulus velocity were observed over all frequencies tested, in the three directions defined. The present study indicates that eye-head coordination processes during linear motion are mainly dependent on the visual system at low frequencies (below 0.25 Hz), with close functional coupling of OKR and eye-head synergy. The otolith system basically works at higher stimulus frequencies and triggers Synergist OOR and ONR. However, both sensorimotor subsystems combine their dynamic properties to provide better eyehead coordination in an extended frequency range and, as evidenced under VS condition, visual and otolith inputs also contribute to eye and neck responses at high and low frequency, respectively. These general laws on functional coupling of the eye and head stabilizing reflexes during linear motion are valid in the three directions tested, even though the relative weight of visual and otolith inputs may vary according to motion direction and/or kinematics.
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  • 159
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    Experimental brain research 91 (1992), S. 425-434 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: SI ; SII ; Area 3b ; Area 2 ; Cytoarchitecture ; Forepaw ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The organization of corticocortical connections in the representation of the forepaw in cat primary somatosensory cortex (SI) was studied following injections of various tracers into different cortical cytoarchitectonic areas. Small injections of horseradish peroxidase, wheat germ agglutinin-conjugated HRP, Phaseolus vulgaris leukoagglutinin, or fast blue were placed into the representation of the forepaw in areas 3b, 1, or 2. The positions of labeled neurons in SI and the surrounding cortical areas were plotted on flattened surface reconstructions to determine the organization of the corticocortical connections within SI. A strong, reciprocal projection linked the two forepaw representations which have been described in area 3b and the part of area 2 which lies in the anterior bank of the lateral ansate sulcus (see Iwamura and Tanaka 1978a, b). Dense projections also linked these areas with SII, as previously reported (Burton and Kopf 1984a). Additional projections to area 3b arose primarily from areas 3a and 1. Projections to area 2 were more widespread than those to area 3b, and arose from all other areas of SI as well as from areas 4 and 5a. All injections into SI tended to label groups of neurons which lay in mediolateral strips. Corticocortical projection neurons which were most heavily labeled by SI injections were pyramidal cells in layer III. Additional projections from area 2 to 3b, area 5a to 2, and SII to areas 2 and 3b arose from layer VI as well. Although neurons of layers III and VI were always the most densely labeled, large injections into SI labeled neurons in layers II and V as well.
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    Experimental brain research 91 (1992), S. 455-466 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Brain damage ; Neural plasticity ; Striate cortex ; Extrastriate cortex ; Recovery of function ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Previous studies indicate that neurons in the cat's posteromedial lateral suprasylvian (PMLS) visual area of cortex show physiological compensation after neonatal but not adult damage to areas 17, 18, and 19 of the visual cortex (collectively, VC). Thus, VC damage in adults produces a loss of direction selectivity and a decrease in response to the ipsilateral eye among PMLS cells, but these changes are not seen in adult cats that received VC damage as kittens. This represents compensation for early VC damage in the sense that PMLS neurons develop properties they would have had if there had been no brain damage. However, this is only a partial compensation for the effects of VC damage. A full compensation would involve development of properties of the VC cells that were removed in the damage. The present study investigated whether this type of compensation occurs for detailed spatial- and temporal-frequency processing. Single-cell recordings were made in PMLS cortex of adult cats that had received a VC lesion on the day of birth or at 8 weeks of age. Responses to sine-wave gratings that varied in spatial frequency, contrast, and temporal frequency were assessed quantitatively. We found that the spatial- and temporal-frequency processing of PMLS cells in adult cats that had neonatal VC damage were not significantly different from PMLS cells in normal cats. Therefore, there was no evidence that PMLS cells can compensate for VC damage by developing properties that are better than normal and like those of the striate cortex cells that were damaged. We also assessed the effects of long-term VC damage in adult cats to determine whether the normal properties seen in cats with neonatal VC damage represent a compensation for abnormalities in PMLS cortex present after adult damage. In a previous study, we found that acute VC damage in adult cats has small but reliable effects on maximal response amplitude, maximal contrast sensitivity, and spatial resolution (Guido et al. 1990b). In the present study, we found that long-term VC damage in adult cats does not increase these abnormalities as a result of secondary degenerative changes. In fact, the minor abnormalities that were present after an acute VC lesion were virtually absent following a long-term adult lesion, perhaps because they were due to transient traumatic effects. Therefore, there was little evidence for abnormalities in spatial- or temporal-frequency processing following long-term adult VC damage for which PMLS cells might show compensation following long-term neonatal damage. Our results thus indicate that there is little or no difference in the spatial- or temporal-frequency processing of PMLS cells in normal cats and cats with long-term VC damage received early in life or as adults. These findings are discussed in relation to the inputs to PMLS cortex and to the behavioral abilities of cats with VC damage at different ages. The implications for under-standing the role of lateral suprasylvian visual cortex in behavioral recovery from VC damage is considered.
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    Experimental brain research 92 (1992), S. 183-193 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Trigeminal afferents ; Trigeminospinal neurones ; Excitation ; Neck motoneurones ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Excitation of dorsal neck motoneurones evoked by electrical stimulation of primary trigeminal afferents in the Gasserian ganglion has been investigated with intracellular recording from α-motoneurones in the cat. Single stimulation in the Gasserian ganglion ipsi-and contralateral to the recording side evoked excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in motoneurones innervating the lateral head flexor muscle splenius (SPL) and the head elevator muscles biventer cervicis and complexus (BCC). The gasserian EPSPs were composed of early and late components which gave the EPSPs a hump-like shape. A short train of stimuli, consisting of two to three volleys, evoked temporal facilitation of both the early and late EPSP components. The latencies of the gasserian EPSPs ranged from 1.6 to 3.6 ms in SPL motoneurones and from 1.6 to 5.8 ms among BCC motoneurones. A rather similar latency distribution between 1.6 and 2.4 ms was found for ipsi- and contralateral EPSPs in SPL and BCC motoneurones, which is compatible with a minimal disynaptic linkage between primary trigeminal afferents and neck motoneurones. Systematic transections of the ipsi- and contralateral trigeminal tracts were performed in the brain stem between 3 and 12 mm rostral to the level of obex. The results demonstrate that both the ipsi- and contralateral disynaptic and late gasserian EPSPs can be mediated via trigeminospinal neurones which take their origin in the nucleus trigeminalis spinalis oralis. Transection of the midline showed that the contralateral trigeminospinal neurones cross in the brain stem. Systematic tracking in and around the ipsilateral trigeminal nuclei demonstrated that the axons of ipsilateral trigeminospinal neurones descend just medial to and/or in the medial part of the nucleus. Spinal cord lesions revealed a location of the axons of the ipsilateral trigeminospinal neurones in the lateral and ventral funiculi. Interaction between the ipsi- and contralateral gasserian EPSPs showed complete summation of the disynaptic EPSP component, while the late components were occluded by about 45%. These results show that the disynaptic EPSPs are mediated by separate trigeminospinal neurones from the ipsi- and contralateral side, while about half of the late EPSPs are mediated by common neurones which receive strong bilateral excitation from commissural neurones in the trigeminal nuclei. Spatial facilitation was found in the late gasserian EPSP but not in the disynaptic gasserian EPSP by conditioning stimulation of cortico- and tectofugal fibres. Disynaptic pyramidal and tectal EPSPs, which are mediated by reticulospinal neurones, were facilitated by a single stimulation in the gasserian ganglion at an optimal interval of 2 ms. It is suggested that primary trigeminal afferents can excite the reticulospinal neurones via a disynaptic trigeminoreticular pathway.
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  • 162
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Visual system ; Visual receptive fields ; Subthreshold summation ; Shift effect ; Dark adaptation ; Benzodiazepines ; GABA ; Bicuculline ; Dopamine ; Levodopa ; Sulpiride ; Atropine ; Human ; Cat ; Psychophysics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Psychophysical experiments in humans have revealed similar characteristics of visual receptive fields as were found in cats and monkeys from retinal ganglion cell recordings. In addition, in some retinal ganglion cells of cats the GABA antagonist bicuculline decreases the activity of the inhibitory surround. These findings led to two predicitions: 1) benzodiazepines will selectively increase the inhibitory surround of human visual receptive fields, 2) after dark adaptation, no free GABA will be available in the synapses and benzodiazepines will have no effect on the visual system. Characteristics of human receptive fields were determined by subthreshold summation: the contrast threshold of a vertical line was measured dependent on the distance of two parallel flanking lines whose contrast was below threshold. Both hypotheses were confirmed: the threshold in the inhibitory region of receptive fields was specifically increased in a dose-dependent manner by midazolam PO (7.5 mg:P〈0.05; 15 mg:P〈0.01). In dark-adapted subjects no effect of midazolam was found. Control experiments with atropine (1 mg IV), sulpiride (100 mg IM), and levodopa (100 mg PO) showed no specific effect. The visual system may be a model to bridge the gap between animal and human psychopharmacology.
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  • 163
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Dental pulp ; Laminin ; Collagen IV ; Odontoblast ; Nerve regeneration ; Immunocytochemistry ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The distribution of laminin-like immunoreactivity in adult normal and denervated cat mandibular tooth pulps was studied by the use of fluorescence microscopy and pre-embedding immunogold electron microscopy. Immunoreactivity to collagen IV was also assessed in order to distinguish basement membranes. In normal pulps, light-microscope laminin-like immunoreactivity was strong along blood vessels and Schwann cell sheaths, and a faint immunoreactivity was seen also in the odontoblast layer. Electron microscopy confirmed the laminin-like immunoreactivity of endothelial and Schwann cell basement membranes at all pulpal levels. In the odontoblast layer and the predentine, nerve-like structures lacking basement membranes but possessing strong membrane laminin-like immunoreactivity were encountered. In addition, a clear-cut laminin-like immunoreactivity of plasma membranes of the somata and processes of odontoblasts was seen. Observations on denervated pulps as well as pulps in which nerve regeneration had taken place did not reveal any changes in the pattern of laminin-immunoreactivity in basement membranes or odontoblasts. Distribution of collagen IV-like immunoreactivity was very similar to laminin-like immunoreactivity in basement membranes of blood vessels and Schwann cells, and appeared unaffected by denervation. The odontoblasts and nerve-like profiles in the odontoblast layer were devoid of collagen IV-like immunoreactivity. We propose that odontoblast-associated laminin could be of significance as guidance for regenerating terminal pulpal nerve fibers to appropriate targets.
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    Cell & tissue research 267 (1992), S. 57-66 
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Retina ; Somatostatin immunoreactivity ; Amacrine cells ; Synapses ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary Two monoclonal antibodies directed against somatostatin 14 were used to study immunoreactive neurons, their processes and their synapses in the cat retina. In retinal whole-mounts, a sparse population of wide-field displaced amacrine cells was observed predominantly in the ventral retina and near the retinal margin. Processes of these cells ramified mainly in two distinct strata within the inner plexiform layer: one near the inner nuclear layer (INL), and the other near the ganglion cell layer (GCL). The length of immunoreactive fibres within each plexus was measured: 232±32 mm/mm2 near the INL and 230±74 mm/mm2 near the GCL in all retinal regions. The immunoreactive processes were studied using electron-microscopic techniques; conventional and some ribbon-containing synapses (“dyads”) were found. Immunolabelled processes received input synapses from other amacrine cell processes. These investigations provide further evidence that this cell population has a diffuse, regulatory or modulatory role for visual-information processing in the inner plexiform layer.
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    Medical & biological engineering & computing 30 (1992), S. 109-114 
    ISSN: 1741-0444
    Keywords: Cat ; Electric stimulation ; Evoked potentials ; FES ; Nerve damage ; Peripheral nerve ; Pulse duration ; Sciatic nerve
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The propensity for two types of charge-balanced stimulus waveforms to induce injury during eight hours of continuous electrical stimulation of the cat sciatic nerve was investigated. One waveform was a biphasic, controlled-current pulse pair, each phase 50 μs in duration, with no delay between the phases (‘short pulse’, selected to excite primarily large axons), whereas in the second type each phase was 100 μs in duration, with a 400 μs delay between the phases (selected to excite axons of a broader spectrum of diameters). The sciatic nerve was examined for early axonal degeneration (EAD) seven days after the session of continuous stimulation. With both waveforms, the threshold stimulus current for axonal injury was greater than the current required to excite all of the nerve's large axons. The correlation between simple stimulus parameters and the amount of EAD was poor, especially with the ‘short pulse’ waveform, probably due to variability between animals. When the stimulus was normalised with respect to the current required to fully recruit the large axons, a good association between damage and stimulus amplitude emerged. The damage threshold was higher for the ‘short pulse’ waveform. The implications for clinical protocols are discussed.
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    Comparative clinical pathology 1 (1991), S. 181-186 
    ISSN: 1433-2981
    Keywords: Cat ; Dog ; Platelet ; Thrombocytosis
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract A retrospective study was made of the clinical data in 118 dogs and 17 cats with thrombocytosis. The mean platelet count for dogs was 647 × 109/l and for cats was 767 × 109/l. There was no significant difference in platelet count based on species, age or sex. The most common disease categories associated with thrombocytosis were neoplasia (25%), gastrointestinal disorders (19%) and endocrine disorders (10%). The most common drug classes associated with thrombocytosis were corticosteroids and antineoplastic agents.
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  • 167
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    Acta neuropathologica 81 (1991), S. 443-449 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Global cerebral ischemia ; Post-ischemic selective brain cooling ; Ischemica neuronal damage ; Light microscopy ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A new method of external selective brain cooling is described, showing its effectiveness in reducing neuronal damage following global cerebral ischemia in cat. The cooling apparatus consists of a specially fitted kind of water jacket in which the animal's head was laid. In a preliminary study it was verified that the device effectively reduces brain temperature without the risk of cardiac arrhythmias due to lowering of core temperature. In the main study cardiac arrest was induced in 23 adult cats, followed after 15 min by cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR). Eight cats could not be revived; of the 15 remaining animals, 7 were assigned to the control group (normothermia) and 8 to the treatment group (cerebral hypothermia). The latter received external brain cooling for 30 min, starting as soon as CPR was begun. Four hours after cardiac arrest all animals were transcardiacally perfused with glutardialdehyde. The brains were stored in fixative and subsequently processed for histopathological and morphometrical evaluation by light microscopy. Analysis of the resulting data showed that animals in the treatment group had a significantly higher percentage of undamaged neurons than animals in the control group, both in the cingulate gyrus (38% vs 10%) and in the parietal cortex (39% vs 14%). The treatment group also had more undamaged neurons in the hippocampus and fewer severely damaged neurons in all three regions, but these differences, though suggestive, were not statistically significant.
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  • 168
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Ampullar nerves ; Semicircular canals ; Vestibular nuclei ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The brainstem projections of the ampullar nerves from the vertical semicircular canals, the anterio (AAN) and the posterior ampullar nerve (PAN), were studied in adult cats using the transganglionic horseradish peroxidase (HRP) method. Each nerve was exposed in three experiments. Two animals in each group had labeling which allowed detailed mapping. From the AAN, terminal-type labeling was found in two separate groups, one laterally and one medially, both in the lateral (LV) and in the superior (SV) vestibular nucleus. In addition, such labeling was found in all parts of the medial vestibular nucleus (MV). Labeled structures were found also in the descending vestibular nucleus, (DV) more densely over its lateral part, except for cell group f, where no labeling was found. From the PAN, terminal-type labeling was found medially and laterally in the LV and in the medial part of the SV In the MV, such labeling was evenly distributed rostrally but concentrated laterally in caudal parts. In the DV, terminal-type labeling was present rostrally, whereas no labeling was seen caudally. In the interstitial nucleus of the vestibular nerve, terminal-type labeling was observed from the AAN but not from the PAN. No labeled fibers from either of the two ampullar nerves were seen outside the vestibular root and nuclei, except for small-caliber fibers from the SV heading towards the brachium conjunctivum. The findings clearly indicate a specific termination for each of the two ampullar nerves.
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  • 169
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    Anatomy and embryology 184 (1991), S. 507-515 
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Congenital malformations ; Dicephalia ; Vascular system patterns ; Vascular branching ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The arterial and venous systems of the neck and heads of a dicephalic iniodymic monosomic cat are described. In the arterial system, an anomalous lingual branch of the right external carotid formed a large subhyoid arch, extending to the midline between both heads, giving off branches supplying the medial aspect of both heads and terminating in two medial internal carotid arteries each for the right or left head. This vessel was considered as an anomalous supernumerary common carotid artery. In the venous system, each lingual branch of linguofacial veins united and formed an anomalous venous arch. It received rostrally a long midline vein running between both heads and connecting with the medial internal jugular system. This vein received tributaries from the left and right heads and was considered as a supernumerary jugular vein. From these observations, and those of others in the literature, it can tentatively be suggested that, in congenital cephalic duplications in domestic mammals, the arterial blood supply for the medial aspect of both heads tends to come from the lingual branch of the external carotid artery, with an unexplained prevailing contribution of the right external carotid system. Two different venous patterns have been observed. In animal especies exhibiting a hyoid venous arch, such as carnivores, a midline supernumerary external jugular vein draining at the anomalous junction between lingual veins of both heads is formed, whilst in animals lacking a constant hyoid venous arch, such as ruminants, an asymmetrical supernumerary external jugular vein draining into the right “normal” external jugular vein has been repeatedly described.
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  • 170
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Cat ; Distal axonopathy ; Dying-back neuropathy ; Heredodegeneration ; Neurological disorder
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Three female cats, littermates born from clinically normal parents, were examined at 8 to 10 weeks of age because of a slowly progressive posterior ataxia. Another cat from a previous litter from the same parents suffered from similar neurological symptoms. Histopathological examination of the nervous tissues of these animals revealed degeneration of axons and myelinopathy in a distal distribution pattern. Both peripheral nerves and central nervous system were involved. The central nervous system lesions were most prominent in the lateral pyramidal tracts of the spinal cord, the fasciculi gracili of the dorsal column in the cervical spinal cord and the cerebellar vermian white matter. In the PNS numerous degenerating nerve fibers were found in the sciatic nerves but not in the spinal nerve roots. Our findings show that these cats were suffering from a hereditary multisystem degeneration with a distribution pattern of the lesions suggestive of a distal axonopathy.
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  • 171
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    Experimental brain research 83 (1991), S. 665-669 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: SDO-analysis ; Tuning curves ; Preferred direction ; Preferred orientation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Simple (N = 284) and complex cells (N = 125) in the central projection area (0–5° eccentricity) of the striate cortex of cats were stimulated with moving light bars and the responses to different directions of movement were recorded and plotted as polar-plots. Fourier analysis was applied to polar plots (SDO-analysis, Wörgötter and Eysel 1987; Wörgötter et al. 1990) to determine the general sensitivity (S) of the cells to visual stimulation, the directional (D) and orientational (O) tuning strength as well as preferred direction (PD) and preferred orientation (PO). Statistical distributions of the S, D and O parameters were determined for simple and complex cells of the cortical layers II–VI. Simple cells were more strongly tuned for direction and orientation than complex cells, whereas complex cells had a greater general sensitivity to visual stimulation. Directional tuning was significantly stronger in layer VI than in layer IV simple cells, otherwise no differences were detected between these two layers. We found that cells with large D and small O components are generally rare. The D and O components were plotted against each other to determine any possible correlation between the tuning strengths. The correlations were statistically significant for simple and complex cells but the correlation coefficients were very small (r 〈 0.3). It is suggested that only a very weak coupling between directional and orientational tuning exists, preferentially in the deeper layer simple cells.
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  • 172
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pain ; Inflammation ; Descending inhibition ; Nociception ; Spinal cord ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In ten cats, single unit electrical activity was recorded in the lumbosacral spinal cord from neurones driven by stimulation of afferent fibres from the ipsilateral knee joint. Tonic descending inhibition (TDI) on the responses of these cells was measured as increases in resting and evoked activity of the neurones following reversible spinalization of the animals with a cold block at upper lumbar level. Acute inflammation of the knee joint was induced in five of the cats by the injection of kaolin and carrageenan into the joint. TDI was observed in 25 of 33 neurones recorded in normal animals (76%) and in 36 of 40 (90%) neurones recorded in animals with acute knee joint inflammation. In both kinds of preparation TDI was more pronounced in neurones recorded in the deep dorsal horn and in the ventral horn than in those recorded in the superficial dorsal horn. There was a tendency in the whole sample for TDI to be greater in neurones with input from inflamed knees. We conclude that the spinal processing of afferent information from joints is under tonic descending influences and that the amount of TDI can be altered during acute arthritis.
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  • 173
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    Experimental brain research 84 (1991), S. 115-124 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Premotor interneurones ; Subnucleus oralis-γ ; Digastric motor nucleus ; Jaw opening reflex ; Trigeminal system ; Motor control ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Seventy-one (n = 71) premotor interneurones have been localized by extracellular recordings within the subnucleus-γ of the oral nucleus of the spinal trigeminal tract (NVspo-γ) in nineteen chloralose anaesthetized cats. The neurons were antidromically activated by microstimulation (minimum = 3μA) applied to the digastric motoneurone subnucleus of the trigeminal motor nucleus. Fifty-one (n = 51) of the interneurones were discharged from the ipsiand nineteen (n = 19) from the contralateral digastric subnucleus. One neurone out of four tested was antidromically activated from both stimulation sites suggesting a bifurcated axon. The identified premotor neurones had a unique convergence profile of oral and perioral primary afferents. Latency calculations indicated that at least 55% of these interneurones were monosynaptically activated by low stimulus strength applied to the inferior alveolar (minimum=1.0 T) and/or the lingual nerve (minimum=1.0 T). The thresholds for evoking the neuronal discharges coincided statistically with those required to evoke a jaw opening reflex response by stimulation of the same nerves. It is suggested that the specific group of NVspo-γ interneurones under different contexts mediates the disynaptic reflex and participates in the centrally and reflexly evoked “patterning” adjustments of the digastric jaw opening motoneurones during ongoing jaw movements. A companion paper reports the convergence of descending cortical, tectal and ascending cervical inputs, as well as of oro-facial and neck primary afferent inputs onto an unselected population of interneurones in the NVspo-γ (Westberg and Olsson 1991).
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  • 174
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    Experimental brain research 84 (1991), S. 12-24 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pretectum ; Thalamus ; Dorsal columns ; Spinal cord ; Sensorimotor functions ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The aim of this study was to corroborate lesioning work (Mackel and Noda 1989), suggesting the pretectal area of the rostral midbrain acts as a relay between the spinal cord and the ventrolateral (VL) nucleus of the thalamus. For this purpose, extracellular recordings were made from neurons in the pretectal area which were antidromically activated by stimulation in the rostral thalamus, particularly in VL. The neurons were tested for input from the dorsal columns of the spinal cord, the dorsal column nuclei, and the ventral quadrant of the spinal cord. Latencies of the antidromic responses ranged between 0.6 and 3.0 ms (median 1.0 ms): no differences in latencies were associated with either location of the neurons in the pretectal area or with the site of their thalamic projection. Orthodromic responses to stimulation of ascending pathways were seen in the majority of neurons throughout the pretectal area sampled. Latencies of orthodromic responses varied considerably, with ranges of 0.9–9 ms, 6–20 ms, and 2.5–20 ms upon stimulating the dorsal column nuclei, dorsal columns, and ventrolateral quadrant, respectively. The shortest-latency responses to stimulation of the dorsal column nuclei or of the ventral quadrant were likely to be monosynaptic. Temporal and spatial facilitation of the responses to ascending input were common. The data show that neurons of the pretectal area are capable of relaying somatosensory input ascending from the spinal cord to the rostral thalamus. It is suggested that the pretectofugal output to VL converges with cerebellar input in VL neurons and becomes incorporated in cerebello-cerebral interactions and, ultimately, the control of movement.
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  • 175
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Chronic deafferentation ; dLGN ; GABA immunoreaction ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The qualitative and quantitative synaptology of flat synaptic vesicle containing “F” type terminals was analysed in normal and in chronically cortically deafferented dorsal Lateral Geniculate Nucleus (dLGN) of the cat using an electron microscopic immunogold technique for visualization of GABA. A direct correlation was found between the density (number of gold particles) of GABA immunostaining and the number of synaptic vesicles in different F terminals. This suggested a quantitative relationship between transmitter content and the number of vesicles in the labeled terminals. Not only the number but also the size of synaptic vesicles was found to be different in the two main groups of F profiles, i.e. the axonal F1 and dendritic F2 terminals. Measurement of the size of synaptic vesicles in F1 axon terminals revealed two subpopulations of these endings: “F11” and “F12” terminals with vesicle diameters of 31.56 ± 0.08 nm and 33.73 ± 0.12 nm (P 〈 0.01; Chi2 test) respectively. The size of synaptic vesicles in axonal F12 terminals was identical to that found in F2 dendritic profiles, suggesting that both processes belonged to the same, intrageniculate (interneuronal) cell population. F11 terminals, however, appeared to be axonal endings of extrageniculate (most probably of perigeniculate) neurons. Quantitative analysis of the two types of GABAergic axon terminals revealed the geniculocortical relay cells to be the main postsynaptic targets for F11 (extrageniculate) terminals while F12 axons terminated equally on both interneurons and relay cells. Following chronic decortication of the dLGN, the distribution pattern of both GABAergic axonal types had changed considerably. As a result of a severe loss in relay cells, more F11 and F12 axon terminals were found on GABA-containing interneuronal processes than on relay cells. An increase in the number of F1 axonal terminals per neuron was also revealed, (particularly on GABAergic interneurons), suggesting a compensatory reactive synaptogenesis by both F axonal types following decortication.
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  • 176
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Monocular deprivation ; Visual cortex ; Current source density ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The goal of this study was to assess changes in synaptic activity in the visual cortex of kittens following brief periods of monocular deprivation. Field potentials evoked by electrical stimulation of both optic nerves were registered in vertical penetrations through areas 17 and 18 of 4–5 week-old kittens which had been monocularly deprived for 2–7 days. In order to assess the laminar distribution of synaptic currents these field potentials were subjected to a current source density analysis. Current source density profiles elicited from the deprived eye differed from those induced from the normal eye in several respects: 1) The amplitudes of the responses showed considerable variation at different recording sites across the tangential dimension of cortex. 2) On the average, sinks and sources were markedly reduced, and this reduction was relatively more pronounced in nongranular than in granular layers. 3) However, in 30% of the tracks the layer IV sink showed no attenuation. It was reduced in 48% of the tracks and completely suppressed in 22% of the tracks. These results indicate that a substantial fraction of the deprived thalamocortical synapses remained functional, but that many of these synaptic events remained subthreshold. The significance of these findings is discussed in the context of recovery processes following reverse suture.
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  • 177
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    Experimental brain research 84 (1991), S. 411-416 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebral cortex ; Current source-density ; Sensory response ; Extent of neuronal activity ; Current dipole moment ; Cat ; Monkey
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Analysis of published values for the depth profile of evoked potentials in primary sensory cortex of cat and monkey provide a consistent estimate for the net current dipole moment per unit area of cortical surface. Comparison with values of the total current dipole moment obtained from neuromagnetic studies on human subjects indicates that coherent neuronal activity giving rise to long-latency sensory evoked components recorded in the human electroencephalogram or magnetoencephalogram extends over a cortical area that is typically ∼40–400 mm2.
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  • 178
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebral temperature ; Cerebral blood flow ; Paradoxical sleep ; Posterior hypothalamus ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Electroencephalogram, caudate nucleus temperature (Tc), ear skin temperature (Te) as well as cerebral blood flow (CBF) measured by a thermal clearance method, were recorded simultaneously and continuously in cats. After baseline recording in which we confirmed the increase of Tc during paradoxical sleep (PS), neuronal cell bodies of the mesencephalic reticular formation and/or the posterior hypothalamus (PH) were destroyed with ibotenic acid. Only PH lesions were followed by either a suppression of the increase or even a decrease of Tc during PS while Te variations were not modified. The decrease in CBF, which was always associated with Tc increase, was suppressed after the PH lesion. These results led us to the conclusion that the increase of Tc at the onset of PS is due to a decrease in CBF. Furthermore, it may be hypothetized that the decrease in CBF depend upon an active vasoconstriction process originating in the PH.
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  • 179
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    Experimental brain research 85 (1991), S. 243-256 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Sartorius ; Muscles ; Task groups ; Kinesiology ; Electromyography ; Reflexes ; CPGs ; Differential activation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The cat sartorius (SA) can be divided functionally into an anterior (SAa), knee extensor portion and a medial (SAm), knee flexor portion; it can be further subdivided anatomically by multiple nerve branches into parallel longitudinal columns that terminate in a distributed insertion at the knee with a continuous range of moment arms. Thus, SA may be controlled by a discrete number of motoneuron task groups reflecting a small number of central command signals or by a continuum of activation patterns associated with a continuum of moment arms. To resolve this question, the activation patterns across the width of the SA were recorded with an electrode array during three kinematically different movements — treadmill locomotion, scratching and paw shaking, in awake, unrestrained cats. Uniformity of activation along the longitudinal axis was also examined because individual muscle fibers do not extend the length of the SA. In addition, the cutaneous reflex responses were recorded throughout all regions of the SA during locomotion. Two fascial surface-patch arrays, each carrying 4–8 pairs of bipolar EMG electrodes, were sutured to the inner surface of the SA, one placed proximally and the other more distally. Each array sampled separate sites across the anterior to medial axis of SA. During locomotion, two basic EMG patterns were observed: the two burst-per-step-cycle pattern typical of SAa and the single burst pattern typical of SAm. There was an abrupt transition in the pattern of activation recorded in the two parts of SA during locomotion, and no continuum in the activation pattern was observed. Stimulation of both sural and saphenous cutaneous nerves during locomotion produced reflex responses that were uniformly distributed throughout SA, in contrast to the regional differences noted during unperturbed walking. Similarly, during scratching and paw shaking all parts of the SA were active simultaneously but with regional differences in EMG amplitude. The abrupt functional border between SAa and SAm coincided with the division of the SA into a knee flexor vs. a knee extensor. In all cases, the quantitative and qualitative differences in SAa and SAm EMGs were uniformly recorded throughout the entire extent of SAa or SAm; i.e., there was no segregation of activity within either SAa or SAm. Furthermore, the time course of EMG from each proximal recording site was nearly identical to the corresponding distal site, indicating no segregation of function along the longitudinal axis of SA. These results indicate that SAa and SAm constitute the smallest functional modules that can be recruited in SA. The functional subdivision of the SA motor nucleus is reflected in the central pattern generators for these movements to permit a task-dependent recruitment of any combination of SAa and SAm. Our data indicate that the number of task groups even in an anatomically and functionally complex muscle like the SA is small and appears to be related to the kinematic conditions under which the muscle operates.
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    Experimental brain research 85 (1991), S. 300-313 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Differential activation ; Kinematics ; Muscles ; Electromyography ; Histochemistry ; Neuromuscular compartments ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Several cat hindlimb muscles that exhibit differential activation (activity that is restricted to a specific region of muscle) during natural movements were studied to determine the possible roles of 1) non-uniform distribution of histochemically-identified muscle fiber-types (semitendinosus, ST; tibialis anterior, TA) or 2) mechanical heterogeneity (biceps femoris, BF; tensor fasciae latae, TFL). Using chronic recording techniques, electromyographic (EMG) activity was recorded from multiple sites of each muscle during treadmill locomotion, ear scratch, and paw shake. Standard histochemical analysis was performed on each muscle to determine fiber-type distribution. The histochemically regionalized muscles (ST and TA) were differentially active during slow locomotion; the deep regions (high in type I [SO] fibers) were active, but the superficial regions (high in type IIB [FG] fibers) were inactive. Vigorous movements (fast locomotion, ear scratch, paw shake) produced additional, synchronous activation of the superficial regions. In all movements, ST and TA activation patterns were consistent with the existence of identically timed synaptic inputs to all motoneurons within each motoneuron pool, resulting in an orderly recruitment of each whole pool. The differential activation recorded from ST and TA during slow locomotion was presumably a consequence of the non-uniform distribution of the different muscle fiber types. In contrast, differential activation of the histochemically nonregionalized, mechanically heterogeneous muscles (BF and TFL) resulted from non-synchronous activation of different muscle regions. The selective activation of BF or TFL compartments was indicative of differential synaptic inputs to, and selective recruitment of, subpopulations of the motoneuron pool, with each motoneuron subpopulation exclusively innervating physically separate regions of the muscle consistent with the regions defined by the neuromuscular territories of the major nerve branches supplying each muscle. Individual neuromuscular compartments of BF and TFL differ in their mechanical arrangements to the skeleton and in their contribution to mechanical action(s) at the hip and knee joints. Selective neural activation of mechanically distinct compartments within a mechanically heterogeneous muscle can provide highly advantageous mechanical “options” for animals that perform kinematically diverse movements. With regard to EMG recording techniques, the results of this study emphasize the need for carefully chosen EMG sampling sites and the value of knowing the muscle histochemistry, neuromuscular and musculoskeletal anatomy and possible mechanical functions prior to recording EMG.
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    Experimental brain research 85 (1991), S. 364-372 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Posture ; Stance ; Balance ; Vestibular system ; Labyrinthectomy ; Ground reaction forces ; EMG ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of bilateral labyrinthectomy on quiet stance in the freely-standing cat. Since loss of the vestibular end organs produces marked deficits in motor behaviour, including ataxia and problems with balance, we hypothesized that labyrinthectomized animals would show impairment in quantitative measures of stance. Stance was quantified in terms of the ground reaction forces under each limb and the tonic electromyographic (EMG) activity of selected muscles. Animals were labyrinthectomized by drilling into the vestibule and removing the vestibular epithelium. Following lesion, animals were able to stand unsupported on the force platform within 2 days. To our surprise, the lesioned animals showed little change in stance parameters from the control, pre-lesion state. Thus, our hypothesis of changes in stance parameters was not supported. There was no change in the distribution of vertical forces under the limbs and no increase in sway, as measured by the area of excursion of the centre of pressure over time. The horizontal plane forces, which were diagonally directed prior to lesion, became more laterally directed and larger in amplitude. The change in direction persisted even after the animals had fully compensated for the lesion, but the force amplitudes returned to control values within 10–12 days. The change in horizontal force direction was similar to that observed in normal animals that were required to stand with their paws closer than preferred in the sagittal plane (unpublished observations). EMG activity changed in some muscles but not others, and usually transiently. One limb extensor showed decreases in tonic activity (gluteus medius), but other extensors showed increases (vastus medialis, soleus). It is likely that the changes in EMG levels were due to the biomechanics of the stance configuration related to the changes in direction of the horizontal plane forces. Kinematic recordings are needed to address this issue further.
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    Experimental brain research 85 (1991), S. 470-474 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pain ; Nociception ; Antidromic activation ; Thalamus ; Brain mapping ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The technique of antidromic mapping with a roving array of electrodes was used to demonstrate that lamina I trigeminothalamic cells responsive specifically to skin temperature project to the n. submedius (Sm) in the medial thalamus of the cat. This finding indicates that Sm receives thermoreceptive in addition to nociceptive information.
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  • 183
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Low threshold spike ; Retinogeniculate gating ; Thalamic response modes ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Prior studies of thalamic neurons have demonstrated that they exhibit at least two response modes: a relay mode and a burst mode. During the relay mode, sensory information is faithfully relayed to cortex; during the burst mode, which is caused by a voltagedependent Ca2+ conductance, this relay of sensory information is interrupted. We began in vivo studies of these response modes in neurons from the lateral geniculate nucleus of anesthetized, paralyzed cats. Each of the 9 X and 10 Y cells we recorded intracellularly displayed voltage-dependent, low threshold spikes that were presumably the Ca2+ spikes described from in vitro recording. These spikes were triangular in waveform and typically had 2–7 fast action potentials (interspike intervals of 1.2–4 ms) riding its crest. Furthermore, the cell's membrane had to be hyperpolarized to de-inactivate the low threshold spike before a depolarization could then activate it. We could activate these low threshold spikes in Y cells from EPSPs, whether spontaneous or evoked from activation of the optic chiasm. However, in only one of the X cells could we activate low threshold spikes from chiasm shock; in the remainder, we could activate low threshold spikes only via depolarizing current pulses, possibly because the EPSPs of these X cells were too small to activate these spikes. We also used extracellular recording to study spontaneous activity and responses to chiasm shock from 114 geniculate neurons and, as a control, 57 optic tract axons. We concentrated on periods of bursty responsiveness signifying the burst mode. We define a burst as 2–7 action potentials with interspike intervals 〈= 4 ms, and the bursts are separated by 〉 100 ms; from our intracellular recording, we know that such bursts signify low threshold spikes. We found that, during extracellular recording, 20 of the 39 X cells and each of the 75 Y cells displayed evidence of the burst response mode, although burst periods were rare in X cells. Electrical activation of the optic chiasm greatly enhanced the burstiness of Y cells for periods of 500 ms or more. We also electrically stimulated the parabrachial region of the midbrain, which provides a mostly cholinergic innervation to the lateral geniculate nucleus. Although parabrachial activation by itself had no detectable effect on Y cell response modes, prior parabrachial activation prevented the enhanced burstiness caused by chiasm stimulation. This parabrachial effect lasted for roughly 500 ms after stimulation. Neither chiasm nor parabrachial stimulation, singly or in combination, had a noticeable effect on the bursting activity of X cells. Finally, none of the extracellularly recorded retinogeniculate axons (23 X and 34 Y) showed any evidence of burst responses. This supports the conclusion that the burst responses we found for geniculate neurons represent an emergent property of the lateral geniculate nucleus, and this burstiness reflects an interruption of retinogeniculate transmission. We conclude that geniculate X and Y cells do indeed show evidence during extracellular recording of maintaining two very different response modes and that, under our recording conditions, Y cells are much more prone to burst activity than are X cells.
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  • 184
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: dLGN ; PGN ; GABA ; Parvalbumin ; Calbindin D ; 28K ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Immunocytochemistry revealed that in the cat dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) almost all parvalbumin-positive cells are GABAergic and about 56% of the calbindin D-28K calbindin-immunoreactive neurons are also GABA-positive. On the other hand, in the same nucleus, almost all GABAergic neurons contain parvalbumin, and about 89% of the GABA-immunoreactive neurons contain calbindin. Double-labeling with calbindin and parvalbumin revealed that approximately 50% of the immunoreactive neurons are doublestained. In the PGN, virtually all neurons are GABA and parvalbuminpositive. Only a few scattered cells were also calbindin-immunoreactive. These results show that GABAergic geniculate cells can be differentiated on the basis of their calcium-binding protein immunoreactivity. Four types of immunoreactive cells are described here: (1) cells positive for GABA, parvalbumin and calbindin, (2) cells positive for GABA and parvalbumin, but negative for calbindin, (3) cells negative for GABA and parvalbumin, but positive for calbindin, (4) cells negative for GABA, parvalbumin and calbindin.
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    Experimental brain research 83 (1991), S. 587-597 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: EMG ; Spinal cord ; Dynamics ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Intersegmental limb dynamics and muscle activities were analyzed for consecutive cycles of paw-shake responses from chronic-spinalized cats to investigate how hindlimb trajectories organize into a pattern with regular oscillations, a steady-state response, or alternatively, into a pattern with irregular oscillations, a nonsteady-State response. In the spinalized preparation, steady-state and nonsteady-state responses have an equal likelihood of emerging from the initial cycles of a paw-shake response, suggesting that regular coupling of joint oscillations is not planned by pattern-generating networks within lumbosacral segments. To examine the characteristics of coupled and uncoupled limb oscillations during pawshake responses, we assessed patterns of muscle activity and hindlimb kinematics of six adult chronic-spinalized cats. Additionally, we used inverse-dynamics techniques to quantify the intersegmental dynamics of the paw, leg, and thigh. Our data indicate that by the second cycle of both steady-state and nonsteady-state responses, the basic pattern of interaction between muscle and motiondependent torques at the ankle and knee joints was established. During subsequent cycles of steady-state responses, a consistent sequence of timing changes occurred, such that, just prior to steady-state oscillations, torque maximums peaked simultaneously at each joint and joint reversals occurred simultaneously. Although nonsteadystate responses showed a similar sequence during beginning cycles, increased ankle muscle and net torques during middle cycles created larger inertial torques at the knee joint that were not counteracted and resulted in irregular and uncoupled knee oscillations. It is likely that neither steady-state nor nonsteady-state oscillations are planned by pattern-generating networks within lumbosacral segments, but that patterns of interjoint coordination emerge from the coupling among oscillators. For paw-shake responses in the spinalized preparation, coupling may depend on interactions between central circuits and motion-dependent feedback that is necessary to stabilize inertial effects due to large ankle joint accelerations.
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  • 186
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    Experimental brain research 84 (1991), S. 561-568 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: C3–C4 propriospinal neurones ; Lateral reticular nucleus ; Pyramid ; Long propriospinal neurones ; Neck motoneurones ; Feed-forward inhibitory interneurones ; Feed-back inhibitory interneurones ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The morphology of single C3–C4 propriospinal neurones (PNs) including the cell body, dendritic tree, axonal trajectory and the pattern of projection and termination of axonal collaterals in the C3–C4 segments was investigated by intra-somatic or intra-axonal injection of horseradish peroxidase. All the C3–C4 PNs could be antidromically activated from the lateral funicle in C6 and the lateral reticular nucleus but not from Th13. Another criterion was that they received monosynaptic excitation from corticospinal fibres in the contralateral pyramid. Twenty-four C3–C4 PNs were successfully stained. They were located in the lateral part of laminae VI–VIII except for two neurones which were located in lamina V and two in lamina IX. Five to eleven dendrites originated from the cell bodies and extended throughout laminae IV–VIII and even into the white matter in the transverse plane and up to 3 mm rostro-caudally. The axonal trajectory from the cell body was usually curved before reaching the lateral funicle. The bifurcation of the stem axon into a descending and an ascending branch was mostly observed in the white matter close to or at the border between the white and grey matter at the level of the cell body. The ascending and descending axonal branches maintained their location in the same part of the lateral funicle. Sixteen out of 24 stem axons gave off collaterals in the grey matter and/or in the white matter. One to five collaterals were given off from the axons in the grey matter. Boutons were found in a restricted region in the intermediate zone from lamina VI to the border between laminae VII and VIII, in the lateral part of laminae V–IX, in the middle and medial parts of laminae VI–VIII. The termination in the vicinity of large neurones in lamina VIII suggests that long PNs receive collateral projections from the C3–C4 PNs. The finding that some collaterals terminated laterally in lamina IX is in agreement with electrophysiological observations that spinal accessory motoneurones receive disynaptic pyramidal excitation which is mediated via C3–C4 PNs. The collateral projection from the C3–C4 PNs to lateral and medial regions in laminae VI-VII is discussed in relation to feed-forward and feed-back inhibitory control of the C3–C4 PNs.
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  • 187
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    Experimental brain research 85 (1991), S. 36-44 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vertical linear acceleration ; Linear vestibulo-ocular reflex ; Temporal conversion ; Optokinetic eye movement ; Labyrinthectomy ; Otolith-visual interaction ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Eye movement responses were examined in alert cats during sinusoidal vertical linear acceleration. Stimulus frequencies of 0.20–0.85 Hz with a constant amplitude of 10.5 cm (corresponding to 0.02–0.31 g) were used. A random visual pattern was presented to give sinusoidal vertical optokinetic stimuli of similar amplitude and frequency to the up-down motion of the cat. 2. Sinusoidal linear acceleration in the presence of a stationary visual pattern produced robust eye movement responses with near compensatory phase at all stimulus frequencies tested. With both eyes covered, a vertical linear vestibulo-ocular reflex (LVOR) was frequently produced at a stimulus strength corresponding to 0.04–0.31 g. The evoked LVOR was always small, and the overall mean response phase values advanced by as much as 70 ° at frequencies below 0.56 Hz, indicating that the otolith signals activated by sinusoidal linear acceleration were not, by themselves, converted into compensatory eye position signals under these experimental conditions. 3. Optokinetic stimulation alone produced more lag of response phase as stimulus frequency increased, and the gain of evoked eye movement responses was smaller at higher stimulus frequencies compared to the gain during linear acceleration in the light. Bilateral labyrinthectomies resulted in a significant change of the eye movement responses during linear acceleration when visual inputs were allowed: there was more phase lag at higher stimulus frequencies and a decreased gain at all frequencies tested. These results indicate that the interaction of otolith and visual inputs produces robust eye movement responses with near compensatory phase during sinusoidal linear acceleration in the light.
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  • 188
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Nucleus of the solitary tract ; Cerebral cortex ; HRP ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The distribution of cerebral cortical neurons sending projection fibers to the nucleus of the solitary tract (NST), and the topographical distribution of axon terminals of cortico-NST fibers within the NST were examined in the cat by two sets of experiments with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and HRP conjugated with wheat germ agglutinin (WGA-HRP). First, HRP was injected into the NST. In the cerebral cortex of these cats, neuronal cell bodies were labeled retrogradely in the deep pyramidal cell layer (layer V): After HRP injection centered on the rostral or middle part of the NST, HRP-labeled neuronal cell bodies were distributed mainly in the orbital gyrus and caudal part of the infralimbic cortex, and additionally in the rostral part of the anterior sylvian gyrus. After HRP injection centered on the caudal part of the NST, labeled neuronal cell bodies were seen mainly in the caudoventral part of the infralimbic cortex, and additionally in the orbital gyrus, posterior sigmoid gyrus and rostral part of the anterior sylvian gyrus. The labeling in the infralimbic cortex, orbital gyrus and anterior sylvian gyrus was bilateral with a predominantly ipsilateral distribution, while that in the posterior sigmoid gyrus was bilateral with a clear-cut contralateral dominance. In the second set of experiments, WGA-HRP was injected into the cerebral cortical regions where neuronal cell bodies had been retrogradely labeled with HRP injected into the NST: After WGA-HRP injection into the orbital gyrus, presumed axon terminals in the NST were labeled in the rostral two thirds of the nucleus bilaterally with an ipsilateral predominance. After WGA-HRP injection into the rostral part of the anterior sylvian gyrus, a moderate number of presumed axon terminals were labeled throughout the whole rostrocaudal extent of the NST bilaterally with a slight ipsilateral dominance. After WGA-HRP injection into the middle and caudal parts of the anterior sylvian gyrus, no labeling was found in the NST. After WGA-HRP injection into the caudal part of the infralimbic cortex, presumed terminal labeling in the NST was seen throughout the whole rostrocaudal extent of the nucleus bilaterally with a dominant ipsilateral distribution. After WGA-HRP injection into the posterior sigmoid gyrus, however, no terminal labeling was found in the NST. The results indicate that cortico-NST fibers from the orbital gyrus terminate in the rostral two thirds of the NST, while those from the infralimbic cortex and the rostral part of the anterior sylvian gyrus project to the whole rostrocaudal extent of the NST.
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  • 189
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    Experimental brain research 87 (1991), S. 108-112 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Posture and stance ; Vestibular system ; Linear acceleration ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The aim of this study was to determine whether vestibular information related to head acceleration is available for triggering postural responses to perturbations of stance in the freely-standing cat. Linear accelerations of the head were recorded during postural responses evoked by linear translations of the support surface. A consistent initial peak of acceleration was observed at an average latency of 22 ms and magnitude of 0.03 g (g is acceleration due to gravity, 9.8 m/s/s). The acceleration peak preceded the first evoked EMG activity by an average of 24 ms. It was concluded that stimulation of the vestibular apparatus was both adequate and early enough for the vestibular system to have triggered the automatic postural response.
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  • 190
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    Experimental brain research 87 (1991), S. 119-125 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Postural control ; Sensorimotor integration ; Motor control ; Reference model ; Motor behavior ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Cats trained to stand on a platform exhibit postural responses to dynamic tilting that appear to be based on an internal reference model of body geometry and the environment rather than directly on sensory inputs, as in a classical reflex chain. The data presented show an independent control of global variables of limb geometry, the length and the orientation, resulting from a parallel processing of multisensory inputs into separate central representations of body tilt. Limb length and orientation changes have completely different response dynamics and can be decoupled by appropriate manipulation of sensory information about self-motion.
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  • 191
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    Experimental brain research 87 (1991), S. 126-140 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Inferior olive ; Cerebellum ; Climbing fibres ; Cerebellar zones ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The olivocerebellar projection to the c1,c2 and c3 zones in the paravermal cortex of lobule Vb/c has been investigated in the cat using a combined electrophysiological/neuroanatomical tracing technique. The zonal boundaries in the paravermal cortex were located by recording, on the cerebellar surface, climbing fibre field potentials evoked in response to percutaneous stimulation of one or more paws. A small (10–30 nl) injection of WGA-HRP was then made either into the centre or into the medial or lateral geographical half of a chosen zone and the resultant distribution of retrogradely labelled cells within the contralateral inferior olive was plotted. The c1 and c3 zones were each found to consist of two mediolaterally oriented ‘sub-zones’ which could be distinguished by their olivocerebellar input. The medial part of the c1 zone received climbing fibre input from the rostromedial part of the dorsal accessory olive (DAO) while the lateral part of the c1 zone received climbing fibre input from middle/rostral regions of the medial accessory olive (MAO). Both medial and lateral ‘sub-zones’ within the c3 zone were found to receive climbing fibre input from the rostral pole of DAO but, whereas there was heavy overlap between the olivary territories projecting to the medial c1 and medial c3 subzones, olivary cells projecting to the lateral part of c3 were located more rostrally within DAO. The c2 zone was found not to be divisible into mediolaterally oriented subzones and to receive climbing fibre input from a region of MAO located rostral and somewhat lateral to the region projecting to the lateral part of the c1 zone. The sub-zonal organisation of the olivocerebellar projection to the c1, c2 and c3 zones is discussed in relation to the functional properties of the different zones.
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  • 192
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Transplantation ; Isochronic ; grafts ; Autografts ; Visual-cortex ; Electrophysiology ; Single cells ; Ocular-dominance ; Orientation-specificity ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The visual cortex of adult cats was studied physiologically following neonatal isochronic transplantation of grafts from areas 17,18, which were placed homotopically, in order to reveal their functional integration and thus possible repairing of damaged cortical neuronal circuits. Three homograft cats, in which transplantation was carried out between siblings (228 cortical cells) were compared to 4 animals receiving reimplanted autografts of the equivalent size (131 cells) as well as 3 animals with analogous sectioning of the visual cortex (162 cells) (pseudograft controls). The location of the boundaries between the transplant region and the host were determined using the Nissl's method for staining histological cross sections. Extracellular unit recording revealed typical waveform of the action potentials in the transplanted region and in the surrounding host tissue of all groups of cats. Visual responsiveness in the homograft cats was 17.5% in the transplanted region and 80.4% in the unoperated hemisphere; the corresponding results were 40.3% for the transplanted region and 82.2% for the unoperated hemisphere in the autografts and 23.1% and 73.4% in the pseudografts. The specificity of the cells to visual stimulation as expressed by their orientation and direction specificity, indicated preservation of these properties in the transplanted cats. While all responsive cells in the transplanted region of the homografts were orientation specific, their proportion was 60% in the autografts and 55.5% in the analogous region in the pseudograft controls. As to the direction specific cells, their performance in the grafted region of the grafted cats was even much higher than that of the pseudograft controls. The ocular dominance distribution of the cells showed preservation of binocularity in the transplanted region (90.0% binocular cells) of the homografts; it was however smaller in the equivalent region of the autografts (65.0%) and remarkably reduced (20.0%) in the pseudografts. It was concluded that despite the deafferentation induced during the transplantation procedure, a remarkable visual responsiveness was found in the transplanted region, indicating postoperative recovery. However, the cells there were mainly affected in their activity and less in their specificity to visual stimulation.
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  • 193
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Interstitial nucleus of Cajal ; Burst-tonic neuron ; Vertical eye movement ; Vertical semicircular canal ; Electrical stimulation ; Latency ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Recent studies have shown that the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC) in the midbrain reticular formation is involved in the conversion of vertical semicircular canal signals into eye position during vertical vestibuloocular reflexes. Secondary vestibulo-ocular relay neurons related to the vertical canals, which constitute the majority of output neurons sending signals from the vestibular nuclei directly to the oculomotor nuclei, have been shown to project axon collaterals to the region within and near the INC. To understand how the INC is involved in the signal conversion, latencies of response of neurons in the INC region to electrical stimulaton of the vestibular nerve were examined in alert cats. The responses of 96 cells whose activity was clearly modulated by sinusoidal pitch rotation (at 0.31 Hz) were analyzed. These included 41 cells whose activity was closely correlated with vertical eye movement (38 burst-tonic and 3 tonic neurons), and 55 other cells (called pitch cells as previously). Twenty nine of the 96 cells (30%) were activated at disynaptic latencies following single shock stimulation of the contralateral vestibular nerve. Disynaptically activated cells were significantly more frequent for pitch cells than for eye movement-related cells (25/55 = 45% vs 4/41 = 10%; p 〈 0.001, Chi-square test). Conversely, cells that did not receive short-latency activation (〈 6 ms) were more frequent among eye movement-related cells than pitch cells (26/41 = 63% vs 13/55 = 24%; p 〈 0.001, Chi-square test). Pitch cells showed significantly less phase lag (re head acceleration) than eye movement-related cells during sinusoidal pitch rotation (mean ± SD 124° ± 17° vs 138° ± 14°. p 〈 0.01, t-test). These results suggest that 1) cells in the INC region other than burst-tonic and tonic neurons mainly receive direct inputs from secondary vestibulo-ocular relay neurons, and that 2) vertical canal signals reach eye movement-related neurons mainly polysynaptically.
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  • 194
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: HRP ; WGA-HRP ; Superior colliculus ; Predorsal bundle neurons ; Tectospinal neurons ; Topographical representations ; Motor control ; Gaze control ; Orienting ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Efferent neurons of the cat superior colliculus (SC) which project in the predorsal bundle (PDB) and to the spinal cord (PDB neurons) form a major pathway by which the SC controls the changes of the direction of gaze in response to stimuli of visual and other modalities. Knowledge of rostrocaudal and lateromedial density distributions of different groups of PDB neurons within the SC is necessary to analyse their relationships with the topography of sensory and motor maps. Density gradients may also bear on the efficacy of connections originating from topographically different collicular regions. In the present study, large injections of HRP/ WGA-HRP were made in the C1 segment of the spinal cord and in the pontobulbar tegmentum. Judged by several morphological criteria, axons of passage, including those not subjected to a direct mechanical damage, were participating in the uptake of tracers. Therefore, labeled SC neurons corresponded to the nearly total populations of contralaterally projecting tectospinal neurons (TSNs) and neurons projecting in the PDB, respectively. Subtraction of the TSN density map from that of the whole PDB population was used to infer the distribution of tectal neurons terminating in the rhombencephalic tegmentum (TRhN). This subtotal labeling method proved useful in resolving the contradictions between the earlier HRP studies on the TSN and TRhN topography. The following density distributions were obtained for different groups of PDB neurons: 1) The mean TSN density is more than two times higher in the lateral half of the SC, representing the lower visual field. In this region the density remains constant from rostral to caudal, i.e., from the representation of vertical meridian to large contralateral azimuths. In the medial half, the average density decreases from rostral to caudal. Consequently, TSNs do not show the caudalward increment predicted by the higher efficacy of caudal stimulation points in eliciting head movements. 2) The distribution of PDB neurons is symmetrical with respect to the representation of the horizontal meridian. It is close to homogeneous at all azimuths of the retinotopic map and within the zone limited by small (10–15°) upward and downward elevations. There are clear density decrements towards the representation of greater elevations. We conclude that the assumption of homogeneous distribution of efferent neurons, made in the models of the primate SC, is valid in the cat, but only for the whole population of neurons projecting in the PDB and within the area representing the proximity of the horizontal meridian. The same restrictions apply to the validity of the translation invariance principle. 3) The distribution of TRhNs, obtained by subtraction, shows a tendency to higher densities in the caudal half of the SC, and a clear bias towards its medial zone, including the representation of the horizontal meridian and upper visual field. The different types of asymmetry in TRhN and TSN populations may be related to different types of head movements depending, respectively, on distant and near stimuli in the upper and lower visual fields.
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    Experimental brain research 87 (1991), S. 497-504 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Postsynaptic potentials ; Palatal stimulation ; Jaw movements ; Trigeminal motoneurons ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Excitation and inhibition of jaw-closing motoneurons (Masseteric and Temporal Motoneurons, Mass. and Temp. Mns) during transient jaw closing, the so-called jaw-closing reflex, and prolonged jaw opening elicited by palatal stimulation were studied. By pressing the anterior palatal surfaces sustained jaw opening was elicited, suggesting that sustained jaw opening results from inhibition of tonic background activity of jaw-closing motoneurons by inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) elicited by mechanical stimulation of the anterior palatal mucosa. Recordings showed that the onset of IPSPs was 80 ms earlier than the onset of jaw opening. Application of diffuse pressure stimulation to the posterior palatal surfaces elicited bursts of spikes triggered on excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs), suggesting that mechanosensory receptors from the posterior palatal mucosa send excitatory synaptic inputs to jaw-closing motoneurons. Furthermore, it is suggested that mechanosensory inputs from the posterior palatal mucosa may excite neurons in the central pattern generator and provide the motor patterns responsible for jaw closure during the jaw-closing reflex. We have demonstrated that excitation of Mass. Mns innervating the deep masseter muscle mainly contributed to maintaining the occlusal phase of jaw closure during the jaw-closing reflex. However, the onset of EPSPs was 100 to 160 ms (n = 27) earlier than the onset of jaw closure. In studies on spontaneously occurring jaw closure it was demonstrated that there was a proportional increase in the number of spikes of the Temp. Mn and the mechanical response (jaw closure).
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  • 196
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    Experimental brain research 83 (1991), S. 489-501 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cutaneous reflexes ; Reflex modulation ; Fictive locomotion ; Interneurons ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Low threshold (≤2×T) cutaneous afferents in the superficial peroneal (SP) and medial plantar (PLNT) nerves both produce short-latency excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) in flexor digitorum longus (FDL) α-motoneurons, with minimum central latencies (≤1.8 ms) that indicate a disynaptic connection. However, SP and PLNT EPSPs in FDL motoneurons are differentially modulated during fictive stepping in decerebrate cats. The early components in SP EPSPs are systematically enhanced during the early flexion phase of fictive stepping (Schmidt et al. 1988) while those in PLNT EPSPs are markedly depressed during flexion. In addition, transmission in the PLNT→FDL pathway is enhanced during occasional step cycles in which the FDL displays firing during the extension phase. This enhancement affects only the trisynaptic components of PLNT EPSPs, is simultaneous with the extension FDL burst, and is not found in SP EPSPs. These results indicate that the SP→FDL and PLNT→FDL pathways are composed of entirely different sets of segmental last-order interneurons, each of which receives sensory information from contiguous, relatively limited regions of skin on the most distal parts of the hindpaw. Possible functional consequences of these interneuronal organizations are discussed.
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  • 197
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    Experimental brain research 84 (1991), S. 374-382 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Motor control ; Intracortical microstimulation ; Hysteresis of muscle contraction ; Stretch and unloading reflexes ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Flexion and extension movements were evoked in the elbow joint of unanesthetized cats by intracortical microstimulation (ICMS) applied to deep layers of the motor cortex (areas 4 and 6). Pulse trains with duration up to 3–4 s, current intensities of 15–50 μA and rates of approximately 100/s were used. Cortically evoked movements (CEMs) were tested mechanically by applying servo-controlled torque disturbances to the joint. The disturbances consisted of two reciprocating sinusoidal pulses of torque with fixed frequencies (1.2 or 3.2 Hz). A pronounced torque-angle hysteresis with long-lasting after-effects was revealed in the presence of the torque disturbances that opposed the CEMs and/or assisted them. Two parameters were introduced to describe the mechanical testing of the CEMs quantitatively: (1) the resulting stiffness (RS) denned during the forward and reverse phases of the disturbed movement as a ratio between the amplitudes of torque wave and the overal change of angle at these phases; (2) uncertainty index (UI) defined as the subtraction of forward and reverse angle changes, which was normalized by the first of these two values. RS was shown to be dependent on the immediate past movement history of the joint, it increased with changes in the direction of movement, and its magnitude during such changes could be several times higher than when the disturbance was in the same direction as the movement. When the directions of the preceding movement and the initial phase of the disturbed one coincided, a steady divergence between joint angles before and after application of the torque disturbance occurred, and the mean values of UI obtained in the experiment with various combinations of torque disturbances ranged from 0.52 to 0.8. In the same experiment when torque disturbances opposed the preceding movement, the reactions were significantly more unstable and the mean values of UI varied from +0.07 to -0.62. The possible mechanisms of the observed hysteresis and its role in motor control are discussed. Thixotropy of the muscle is considered to be the main factor of these effects. The muscle hysteresis seems to be significantly increased by a corresponding behaviour of the muscle spindles, this leads to a pronounced asymmetry of stretch and unloading reflexes acting on spinal and supraspinal levels. Based on the data obtained, it could be concluded that muscle hysteresis and its influence on the overal motor performance should not be ignored. Application of the so-called spring model of muscle and the equilibrium point hypothesis can lead to a mistaken treatment of experimental results in various motor control problems.
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  • 198
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vertical linear acceleration ; Interstitial nucleus of Cajal ; Burst-tonic neuron ; Linear vestibuloocular reflex ; Temporal conversion ; Optokinetic eye movement ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. A total of 43 neurons that showed a close correlation with vertical eye movement with a burst-tonic or tonic type response during spontaneous saccades, were recorded within, and in the close vicinity of, the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC) in alert cats. Neuronal responses to sinusoidal vertical linear acceleration (0.2–0.85 Hz, amplitude 10.5 cm) and optokinetic stimuli (0.1–1.0 Hz, amplitude 10.5 cm), were examined. 2. All 43 eye movement-related neurons responded to sinusoidal vertical linear acceleration in the presence of a stationary visual pattern in correlation to robust eye movement responses with compensatory phase. Phase and gain values (re stimulus position) of response of individual cells were independent of the stimulus frequencies tested. Of these, 33 cells were examined during linear acceleration without visual input. Most cells (27/33) did not respond even when a weak linear vestibulo-ocular reflex was present (6/27). The remaining 6 cells (6/33) responded to linear acceleration. Their mean phase values advanced by 80 ° and gain dropped by 55% compared to the responses with visual inputs. 3. Twenty eight of the 43 cells were examined during vertical optokinetic stimuli. The activity of all 28 cells was modulated in correlation to eye movement responses. Response phase showed more lag, and gain decreased as stimulus frequencies increased, similar to optokinetic eye movement responses. 4. The close correlation between the activity of eye movement-related neurons in the INC region and robust eye movements during linear acceleration with visual inputs and optokinetic stimuli suggest that these neurons are involved in some aspect of vertical eye position generation during such stimuli.
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  • 199
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Presynaptic inhibition ; Heterosynaptic facilitation ; Monosynaptic EPSPs ; Spinal cord ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. In the chloralose anesthetized cat, conditioning stimulation of group I flexor afferents depresses the monosynaptic potentials generated by Ia afferents in single spinal motoneurons or in populations of motoneurons without affecting the monosynaptic potentials produced by stimulation of descending fibers in the ipsilateral ventromedial fasciculus (VMF). 2. Heterosynaptic facilitation of monosynaptic reflexes was used to test changes in the presynaptic effectiveness of excitatory inputs with direct connections with motoneurons. We found that the heterosynaptic facilitation of Ia origin was reduced by conditioning stimulation of group I afferents from flexors, without affecting the heterosynaptic facilitation produced by stimulation of the VMF. 3. These results confirm and expand previous observations showing that the synaptic effectiveness of descending fibers synapsing with motoneurons is not subjected to a presynaptic control mechanism of the type acting on Ia fiber terminals, and provide further basis for the use of changes in heterosynaptic facilitation of monosynaptic reflexes of Ia origin as an estimate of changes in presynaptic inhibition of Ia fibers (Hultborn et al. 1987a).
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  • 200
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    Experimental brain research 85 (1991), S. 103-113 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Presynaptic inhibition ; Baclofen ; Monosynaptic EPSPs ; Spinal cord ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. In cats anesthetized with alpha-chloralose, population synaptic responses of motoneurons produced by stimulation of group I afferents were recorded from ventral roots with a sucrose gap or extracellularly from the motor pool. These responses were depressed, and often abolished, following the intravenous injection of 1–3 mg/kg of (−)-baclofen, a presumed GABAb agonist. 2. The monosynaptic population responses of motoneurons produced by stimulation of the ipsilateral ventromedial funiculus (VMF), the bulbar reticular formation or the vestibular nucleus, were also depressed following the administration of (−)-baclofen, but to a lesser degree than responses produced by stimulation of group I fibers. 3. Depression of the synaptic actions of Ia and of descending fibers following the administration of (−)-baclofen occurred without significant changes in the presynaptic volley recorded from the cord dorsum. However, in 3/4 experiments the intraspinally recorded Ia terminal potential was reduced following the injection of (−)-baclofen. The VMF terminal potentials were also depressed, but to a lesser degree. 4. Intracellular recordings from spinal motoneurons indicate that the (−)-baclofen-induced depression of the monosynaptic Ia- and VMF-EPSPs occurred without important changes in the time course of EPSP decay. This suggests that with the amounts used, postsynaptic changes were not contributing significantly to the EPSP depression. 5. It is suggested that (−)-baclofen depresses synaptic transmission probably by activation of GABAb receptors located at the intraspinal terminations of Ia and descending fibers. The lower sensitivity of VMF actions to (−)-baclofen would be accounted for by a relatively low density of baclofen receptors in descending fiber terminals.
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