Cutaneous responsiveness of lumbar spinal neurons in awake and halothane-anesthetized sheep
J. F. Herrero and P. M. Headley Department of Physiology, University of Bristol, School of Medical Sciences, United Kingdom. 1. To compare the responsiveness of lumbar spinal neurons to peripheral sensory stimuli under normal physiological conditions and under halothane anesthesia, we performed a st...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1995-10, Vol.74 (4), p.1549-1562 |
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Zusammenfassung: | J. F. Herrero and P. M. Headley
Department of Physiology, University of Bristol, School of Medical Sciences, United Kingdom.
1. To compare the responsiveness of lumbar spinal neurons to peripheral
sensory stimuli under normal physiological conditions and under halothane
anesthesia, we performed a study in sheep that were prepared chronically.
This permitted recordings to be made in the same animals either when they
were awake and free from recent surgery, drugs, and training and only
partially restrained or when they were anesthetized with halothane. 2. We
recorded 261 units in dorsal and ventral horns under conscious conditions.
Of these, 19% had no detectable receptive field (RF) and 44% had responses
dominated by proprioceptive inputs; these units were not investigated in
detail. The remaining 96 neurons (37%) had clearly defined cutaneous RFs.
Of these, most (72%) had wide-dynamic-range (WDR; convergent,
multireceptive) properties, 19% were low-threshold mechanoreceptive (LTMR),
and 9% were high-threshold mechanoreceptive (HTMR). These units with
cutaneous RFs were investigated in greater detail. 3. The spontaneous
activity under these awake conditions was low (< 4 spikes/s) for nearly
all units in all three categories. The mechanical threshold of the most
sensitive (central) part of the cutaneous RF was assessed with von Frey
bristles. Thresholds were < 5 mN for all LTMR neurons, < 1-30 mN for
WDR neurons, and > 80 mN for HTMR neurons. The size of the low-threshold
cutaneous RFs was significantly larger for WDR neurons (mean 46 cm2) and
HTMR neurons (45 cm2) than for LTMR neurons (24 cm2). The RFs were
distributed all over the ipsilateral hindlimb. Large RFs were mostly
proximal, whereas small RFs were distributed relatively evenly over the
limb. 4. Recordings were made from a further 165 units while the animals
were under halothane anesthesia. With 86 neurons having cutaneous
peripheral RFs, the proportions having LTMR, HTMR, or WDR characteristics
were very similar to those in awake animals. Under halothane the ongoing
activity of WDR units was slightly (but significantly) less. The threshold
to von Frey bristle stimulation was significantly higher only for WDR
units, in both dorsal and ventral horns. The mean size of cutaneous RFs was
significantly larger in all classes of units recorded under halothane
anesthesia. For WDR units this was true for cells in both dorsal and
ventral horns. This effect on mean values was due to a larger proportion of
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1995.74.4.1549 |