Tonic differential supraspinal modulation of PAD and PAH of segmental and ascending intraspinal collaterals of single group I muscle afferents in the cat spinal cord

P Rudomin, J Lomeli, J Quevedo - Experimental brain research, 2004 - Springer
P Rudomin, J Lomeli, J Quevedo
Experimental brain research, 2004Springer
We compared in the anesthetized cat the effects of reversible spinalization by cold block on
primary afferent depolarization (PAD) and primary afferent hyperpolarization (PAH) elicited
in pairs of intraspinal collaterals of single group I afferents from the gastrocnemius nerve,
one of the pairs ending in the L3 segment, around the Clarke's column nuclei, and the other
in the L6 segment within the intermediate zone. PAD in each collateral was estimated by
independent computer-controlled measurement of the intraspinal current required to …
Abstract
We compared in the anesthetized cat the effects of reversible spinalization by cold block on primary afferent depolarization (PAD) and primary afferent hyperpolarization (PAH) elicited in pairs of intraspinal collaterals of single group I afferents from the gastrocnemius nerve, one of the pairs ending in the L3 segment, around the Clarke’s column nuclei, and the other in the L6 segment within the intermediate zone. PAD in each collateral was estimated by independent computer-controlled measurement of the intraspinal current required to maintain a constant probability of antidromic firing. The results indicate that the segmental and ascending collaterals of individual afferents are subjected to a tonic PAD of descending origin affecting in a differential manner the excitatory and inhibitory actions of cutaneous and joint afferents on the pathways mediating the PAD of group I fibers. The PAD-mediating networks appear to function as distributed systems whose output will be determined by the balance of the segmental and supraspinal influences received at that moment. It is suggested that the descending differential modulation of PAD enables the intraspinal arborizations of the muscle afferents to function as dynamic systems, in which information transmitted to segmental reflex pathways and to Clarke’s column neurons by common sources can be decoupled by sensory and descending inputs, and funneled to specific targets according to the motor tasks to be performed.
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