Esotropias with Straight Eyes Under Anesthesia Treated Exclusively with Bilateral Fadenoperation: Tonic Response to a Tonic Deviation?

Author(s):  
Dominique A. Thouvenin ◽  
Cécile Lesage ◽  
Marie C. Sotiropoulos ◽  
Jean L. Arné
Keyword(s):  
1991 ◽  
Vol 261 (6) ◽  
pp. R1402-R1408 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Nakamura ◽  
K. Kurihara

The temperature dependence of the canine and rat chorda tympani nerve responses to various taste stimuli was examined. The temperature dependence greatly varied with species of stimuli. In the dog, the tonic responses to fructose, sucrose, acetic acid, and guanosine 5'-monophosphate (GMP) and the response induced by the synergism between monosodium glutamate (MSG) and GMP showed peaks at approximately 30 degrees C, whereas those to NaCl, NH4Cl, and MSG showed peaks between 10 and 20 degrees C. In the rat, the tonic response to NH4Cl increased with an increase in temperature up to 45 degrees C, whereas the responses to other stimuli examined showed peaks at approximately 30 degrees C. The responses to glycine, sucrose, and quinine showed sharp temperature dependence, and the responses to acids (HCl and acetic acid) and salts (NaCl and KCl) showed relatively flat dependence. The effects of the temperature change on dose-response curves for fructose, NH4Cl, and GMP were examined using dogs. The temperature change did not practically affect the thresholds for these stimuli and affected the magnitude of the responses to higher concentrations of stimuli. The origins of the temperature dependence were discussed in terms of taste receptor mechanisms.


2001 ◽  
Vol 204 (20) ◽  
pp. 3411-3423 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masazumi Iwasaki ◽  
Ayako Ohata ◽  
Yoshinori Okada ◽  
Hideo Sekiguchi ◽  
Akiyoshi Niida

SUMMARY The relationship between segmental mobility and the organisation of thoracic stretch receptors was examined in the deep-sea isopod Bathynomus doederleini, which shows a developed adaptive behaviour during digging. The movements of segments during digging were analysed from video recordings, which showed that a large excursion occurred in the anterior thoracic segments. Dye-fills of axons revealed four types of thoracic stretch receptor (TSR): an N-cell type (TSR-1), a differentiated N-cell type (TSR-2), a muscle receptor organ (MRO)-type with a long, single receptor muscle (TSR-3) and an MRO-type with a short, single receptor muscle (TSR-4 to TSR-7). Physiologically, TSR-1 and TSR-2 are tonic-type stretch receptors. TSR-3 to TSR-7 show two kinds of stretch-activated responses, a tonic response and a phasico-tonic response in which responses are maintained as long as the stretch stimulus is delivered. Both TSR-2, with a long muscle strand, and TSR-3, with a single, long receptor muscle, have a wide dynamic range in their stretch-activated response. In addition, TSR-2 is controlled by an intersegmental inhibitory reflex from TSR-3. These results suggest that, although TSR-1 has no receptor muscle and TSR-2 has a less-differentiated receptor-like muscle, they are fully functional position detectors of segmental movements, as are the MRO-type receptors TSR-3 to TSR-7.


1994 ◽  
Vol 267 (4) ◽  
pp. G569-G574 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Coffin ◽  
M. Lemann ◽  
B. Flourie ◽  
L. Picon ◽  
J. C. Rambaud ◽  
...  

Using an electronic barostat in the human terminal ileum, we studied ileal tone in response to various stimuli in 10 healthy volunteers. Phasic activity was also measured by manometry. Graded orad (ileal) and caudad (cecal) balloon distensions did not produce any significant changes in ileal tone at all levels tested, even when a sensation of discomfort was felt. A linear relationship between pressure and volume was observed during in situ isobaric ileal distensions. Meal induced a biphasic tonic response with a brief (20 min) and immediate decrease in intrabag volume (64 +/- 7% of preprandial value, P < 0.05), followed by a prolonged increase in intrabag volume (158 +/- 10% of preprandial value, P < 0.05). A significant correlation was found between volume variations and phasic activities during the first phase (r = 0.88, P < 0.05), whereas no correlation was found during the second phase (r = 0.55, NS). The administration of glucagon induced a significant increase in intrabag volume from 45 +/- 5 to 70 +/- 8 ml (P < 0.05). We conclude that 1) regional distensions do not influence ileal tone and phasic motility, 2) the ileum does not show accommodation to distensions, and 3) meal produces an immediate increase in phasic and tonic activity followed by a prolonged relaxation.


1994 ◽  
Vol 72 (5) ◽  
pp. 2280-2301 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. J. Prud'homme ◽  
J. F. Kalaska

1. We studied the activity of 254 cells in the primary somatosensory cortex (SI) responding to inputs from peripheral proprioceptors in a variety of tasks requiring active reaching movements of the contralateral arm. 2. The majority of cells with receptive fields on the proximal arm (shoulder and elbow) were broadly and unimodally tuned for movement direction, often with approximately sinusoidal tuning curves similar to those seen in motor and parietal cortex. 3. The predominant temporal response profiles were directionally tuned phasic bursts during movement and tonic activity that varied with different arm postures. 4. Most cells showed both phasic and tonic response components to differing degrees, and the population formed a continuum from purely phasic to purely tonic cells with no evidence of separate distinct phasic and tonic populations. This indicates that the initial cortical neuronal correlates of the introspectively distinguishable sensations of movement and position are represented in an overlapping or distributed manner in SI. 5. The directional tuning of the phasic and tonic response components of most cells was generally similar, although rarely identical. 6. We tested 62 cells during similar active and passive arm movements. Many cells showed large differences in their responses in the two conditions, presumably due to changes in peripheral receptor discharge during active muscle contractions. 7. We tested 86 cells in a convergent movement task in which monkeys made reaching movements to a single central target from eight peripheral starting positions. A majority of the cells (46 of 86, 53.5%) showed a movement direction-related hysteresis in which their tonic activity after movement to the central target varied with the direction by which the arm moved to the target. The directionality of this hysteresis was coupled with the movement-related directional tuning of the cells. 8. We recorded the discharge of 93 cells as the monkeys performed the task while compensating for loads in different directions. The large majority of cells showed a statistically significant modulation of activity as a function of load direction, which was qualitatively similar to that seen in motor cortex under similar task conditions. Quantitatively, however, the sensitivity of SI proprioceptive cells to loads was less than that seen in motor cortex but greater than in parietal cortex. 9. We interpret these results in terms of their implications for the central representation of the spatiotemporal form (“kinematics”) of arm movements and postures. Most importantly, the results emphasize the important influence of muscle contractile activity on the central proprioceptive representation of active movements.


1992 ◽  
Vol 68 (6) ◽  
pp. 2185-2198 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Lu ◽  
W. Guido ◽  
S. M. Sherman

1. Thalamic relay cells, including those of the lateral geniculate nucleus, display a low-threshold spike (LT spike), which is a large depolarization due to an increased Ca2+ conductance. Typically riding the crest of each LT spike is a burst of from two to seven action potentials, which we refer to as the LT burst. The LT spike is voltage dependent, because if the cell's resting membrane potential is more depolarized than roughly -60 mV, the LT spike is inactivated, but if more hyperpolarized, the spike is deinactivated and can be activated by a depolarization, such as from an afferent excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP). Thalamic relay cells thus display two response modes: a relay or tonic mode, when the cell is depolarized and LT spikes are inactivated, leading to tonic firing of action potentials; and a burst mode, when the cell is hyperpolarized and tends to respond with LT spikes and their associated bursts of action potentials. 2. We were interested in the contribution of the LT spike on the transmission of visually evoked signals through geniculate relay cells to visual cortex. We recorded intracellularly from geniculate cells in an anesthetized, paralyzed, in vivo cat preparation to study the effects of membrane voltage, and thus the presence or absence of LT spikes, on responses to drifting sine-wave gratings. We monitored the visually evoked responses of 14 geniculate neurons (6 X, 7 Y, and 1 unclassified) at different membrane potentials at which LT spikes were inactivated or deinactivated. 3. Changing membrane voltage during visual stimulation switched the response mode of every cell between the relay and burst modes. In the burst mode, LT spikes occurred in phase with the visual stimulus and not at rhythmic intervals uncorrelated to visual stimuli. To any given stimulus cycle, the cell responded usually with an LT burst or a tonic response, and rarely was more than one LT burst evoked by a stimulus cycle. Occasionally a single cycle evoked both an LT burst and tonic response, but always the LT burst occurred first. 4. The spatial tuning characteristics of the cells did not differ dramatically as a function of membrane potential, because the tuning of the LT bursts was quite similar to that of the tonic response component. Although we did not obtain complete temporal tuning properties, we did note that hyperpolarized cells responded reliably with LT bursts at several temporal frequencies. 5. A consistent difference was seen between the LT burst and tonic response components in terms of response linearity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1976 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 533-538 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Souhrada ◽  
D. W. Dickey

Main pulmonary arteries (MPA) were isolated from young guinea pigs and incubated in a modified Krebs-Henseleit solution containing either glucose and sucrose, or sucrose alone. Experimental hypoxia (PO2=30 mmHg) was induced by aerating the muscle chamber with a gas mixture of 95% nitrogen and 5% carbon dioxide. In must experiments the MPA was electrically stimulated, whereas in some no electrical stimulation was used. The isometric tension of electrically stimulated MPA was analyzed by means of resting tension (RT), active tension (ATmax), and maximum rate of tension development (dT/dt). It was demonstrated that when MPA was exposed to acute hypoxia in a glucose-free medium a significant increase in resting tension was observed in both electrically stimulated and nonstimulated preparations. However, the significantly hypoxic response was inhibited by the presence of glucose in the experimental medium. This tonic response of MPA is suggestive of the in vivo hypoxic pressor response of pulmonary circulation. A lower oxygen tension (PO2=95 mmHg) exposure prior to hypoxia significantly potentiated this hypoxic response of the MPA. In a separate series of experiments, isolated aortas demonstrated a similar response when exposed to acute hypoxia in vitro. Similarly, as in experiments with MPA, the presence of glucose inhibited the hypoxic tonic response of isolated aorta.


2018 ◽  
Vol 119 ◽  
pp. 38-44 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa G. Hamer ◽  
Sacha La Bastide-Van Gemert ◽  
Anke G. Boxum ◽  
Linze J. Dijkstra ◽  
Tjitske Hielkema ◽  
...  

1985 ◽  
Vol 248 (6) ◽  
pp. G655-G662 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Robotham ◽  
J. Jury ◽  
E. E. Daniel

The effects of capsaicin on the function and structure of muscularis mucosa of opossum esophagus were studied. In this tissue there are numerous nerves containing a substance P-like immunoreactive substance (SPLS), and electrical field stimulation (EFS) leads to a phasic response that appears to be due to release of acetylcholine, followed by a tonic response at higher frequencies of stimulation that appears to be due to release of a SPLS. The acetylcholine released by EFS and exogenous muscarinic agonists inhibits release of this SPLS (8). In the present study capsaicin (5 X 10(-5) M) was shown to cause a tonic submaximal contraction in most cases. This was prevented by substance P tachyphylaxis and by pretreatment with the partial agonist [D-Pro2, D-Trp7,9]substance P, the antagonist [D-Arg1, D-Trp7, Leu11]substance P, and tetrodotoxin. This response to capsaicin could not be repeated even after 2 h. Capsaicin also abolished the tonic response to high-frequency EFS without affecting phasic responses and reduced markedly the enhanced tonic response after atropine had abolished the phasic response. This occurred with or without a preliminary contraction to capsaicin. This tonic response to high-frequency EFS recovered completely 1-2 h after washing out capsaicin. Then, a further administration of capsaicin had no direct effect but again abolished tonic responses to EFS. Capsaicin reduced responses to exogenous substance P or carbachol only partially. When tissues were fixed and studied after capsaicin had abolished tonic responses to EFS, specific damage to nerve varicosities or synaptic vesicles in nerve varicosities could not be demonstrated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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