Central command, but not muscle reflex, stimulates cutaneous sympathetic efferents of cats

1998 ◽  
Vol 274 (5) ◽  
pp. H1552-H1559 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janeen M. Hill ◽  
Marc P. Kaufman

We determined the effects of stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) and the muscle reflex, each evoked separately, on the discharge of cutaneous sympathetic fibers innervating the hairy skin of decerebrate cats. Electrical stimulation of the MLR was performed while the cats were paralyzed with vecuronium bromide. The muscle reflex was evoked while the cats were not paralyzed by electrical stimulation of the tibial nerve at current intensities that did not activate directly group III and IV muscle afferents. MLR stimulation increased, on average, the discharge of the 23 cutaneous sympathetic fibers tested ( P < 0.05). The muscle reflex, in contrast, had no overall effect on the discharge of 21 sympathetic fibers tested ( P > 0.05). Both maneuvers markedly increased mean arterial pressure and heart rate ( P < 0.05). Prevention of the baroreceptor reflex with the α-adrenergic blocking agent phentolamine did not reveal a stimulatory effect of the muscle reflex on cutaneous sympathetic discharge. We conclude that the MLR is a more important mechanism than is the muscle reflex in controlling sympathetic discharge to hairy skin during dynamic exercise.

2004 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 1166-1169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramy L. Hanna ◽  
Marc P. Kaufman

The responses of group III and IV triceps surae muscle afferents to intra-arterial injection of α,β-methylene ATP (50 μg/kg) was examined in decerebrate cats. We found that this P2X3 agonist stimulated only three of 18 group III afferents but 7 of 9 group IV afferents ( P < 0.004). The three group III afferents stimulated by α,β-methylene ATP conducted impulses below 4 m/s. Pyridoxal phosphate-6-azophenyl-2′,4′-disulfonic acid, a P2-receptor antagonist, prevented the stimulation of these afferents by α,β-methylene ATP. We conclude that P2X3 agonists stimulate only the slowest conducting group III muscle afferents as well as group IV afferents.


1997 ◽  
Vol 82 (6) ◽  
pp. 1811-1817 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine M. Adreani ◽  
Janeen M. Hill ◽  
Marc P. Kaufman

Adreani, Christine M., Janeen M. Hill, and Marc P. Kaufman.Responses of group III and IV muscle afferents to dynamic exercise. J. Appl. Physiol. 82(6): 1811–1817, 1997.—Tetanic contraction of hindlimb skeletal muscle, induced by electrical stimulation of either ventral roots or peripheral nerves, is well known to activate group III and IV afferents. Nevertheless, the effect of dynamic exercise on the discharge of these thin fiber afferents is unknown. To shed some light on this question, we recorded in decerebrate cats the discharge of 24 group III and 10 group IV afferents while the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) was stimulated electrically. Each of the 34 afferents had their receptive fields in the triceps surae muscles. Stimulation of the MLR for 1 min caused the triceps surae muscles to contract rhythmically, an effect induced by an α-motoneuron discharge pattern and recruitment order almost identical to that occurring during dynamic exercise. Eighteen of the 24 group III and 8 of the 10 group IV muscle afferents were stimulated by MLR stimulation. The oxygen consumption of the dynamically exercising triceps surae muscles was increased by 2.5-fold over their resting levels. We conclude that low levels of dynamic exercise stimulate group III and IV muscle afferents.


2000 ◽  
Vol 278 (3) ◽  
pp. H871-H877 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Legramante ◽  
G. Raimondi ◽  
C. M. Adreani ◽  
S. Sacco ◽  
F. Iellamo ◽  
...  

Repetitive-twitch contraction of the hindlimb muscles in anesthetized rabbits consistently evokes a reflex depressor response, whereas this type of contraction in anesthetized cats evokes a reflex pressor response in about one-half of the preparations tested. Rapidly conducting group III fibers appear to comprise the afferent arm of the reflex arc, evoking the depressor response to twitch contraction in rabbits because electrical stimulation of their axons reflexly decreases arterial pressure. In contrast, electrical stimulation of the axons of slowly conducting group III and group IV afferents reflexly increases arterial pressure in rabbits. In the present study, we examined the discharge properties of group III and IV muscle afferents and found that the former (i.e., 13 of 20), but not the latter (i.e., 0 of 10), were stimulated by 5 min of repetitive-twitch contraction (1 Hz) of the rabbit triceps surae muscles. Moreover, most of the group III afferents responding to contraction appeared to be mechanically sensitive, discharging in synchrony with the muscle twitch. On average, rapidly conducting group III afferents responded for the 5-min duration of 1-Hz repetitive-twitch contraction, whereas slowly conducting group III afferents responded only for the first 2 min of contraction. We conclude that rapidly conducting group III afferents, which are mechanically sensitive, are primarily responsible for evoking the reflex depressor response to repetitive-twitch contractions in anesthetized rabbits.


1998 ◽  
Vol 84 (6) ◽  
pp. 1827-1833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christine M. Adreani ◽  
Marc P. Kaufman

Our laboratory has shown previously that a low level of dynamic exercise induced by electrical stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) stimulated group III and IV muscle afferents in decerebrate unanesthetized cats (C. M. Adreani, J. M. Hill, and M. P. Kaufman. J. Appl. Physiol. 83: 1811–1817, 1997). In the present study, we have extended these findings by examining the effect of occluding the arterial supply to the dynamically exercising muscles on the afferents’ responses to MLR stimulation. In decerebrate cats, we found that arterial occlusion increased the responsiveness to a low level of dynamic exercise in 44% of the group III and 47% of the group IV afferents tested. Occlusion, compared with the freely perfused state, did not increase the concentrations of either hydrogen ion or lactate ion in the venous effluent from the exercising muscles. We conclude that arterial occlusion caused some unspecified substance to accumulate in the working muscles to increase the sensitivity of equal percentages of group III and IV afferents to dynamic exercise.


1957 ◽  
Vol 188 (2) ◽  
pp. 238-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward V. Evarts ◽  
John R. Hughes

The lateral geniculate response to electrical stimulation of the optic nerve was recorded in decerebrate cats and in cats anesthetized with Nembutal. Tetanization of the optic nerve at 500/sec. for 20 seconds in nembutalized cats produced a prolonged second subnormality of the geniculate postsynaptic response. Further tetanization during tetanically-induced second subnormality produced posttetanic potentiation (PTP). The degree of PTP (expressed in percentage of the pretetanic level) of the postsynaptic response following a 20-second tetanus was proportional to the degree of second subnormality present at the time the tetanus was applied. PTP was also found to occur during the subnormality which followed a brief train of optic nerve shocks, and during LSD-induced subnormality. PTP of postsynaptic lateral geniculate potentials occurred only rarely in the absence of some form of intentionally induced subnormality.


2014 ◽  
Vol 116 (4) ◽  
pp. 385-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
David S. Kennedy ◽  
Chris J. McNeil ◽  
Simon C. Gandevia ◽  
Janet L. Taylor

With fatiguing exercise, firing of group III/IV muscle afferents reduces voluntary activation and force of the exercised muscles. These afferents can also act across agonist/antagonist pairs, reducing voluntary activation and force in nonfatigued muscles. We hypothesized that maintained firing of group III/IV muscle afferents after a fatiguing adductor pollicis (AP) contraction would decrease voluntary activation and force of AP and ipsilateral elbow flexors. In two experiments ( n = 10) we examined voluntary activation of AP and elbow flexors by measuring changes in superimposed twitches evoked by ulnar nerve stimulation and transcranial magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex, respectively. Inflation of a sphygmomanometer cuff after a 2-min AP maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) blocked circulation of the hand for 2 min and maintained firing of group III/IV muscle afferents. After a 2-min AP MVC, maximal AP voluntary activation was lower with than without ischemia (56.2 ± 17.7% vs. 76.3 ± 14.6%; mean ± SD; P < 0.05) as was force (40.3 ± 12.8% vs. 57.1 ± 13.8% peak MVC; P < 0.05). Likewise, after a 2-min AP MVC, elbow flexion voluntary activation was lower with than without ischemia (88.3 ± 7.5% vs. 93.6 ± 3.9%; P < 0.05) as was torque (80.2 ± 4.6% vs. 86.6 ± 1.0% peak MVC; P < 0.05). Pain during ischemia was reported as Moderate to Very Strong. Postfatigue firing of group III/IV muscle afferents from the hand decreased voluntary drive and force of AP. Moreover, this effect decreased voluntary drive and torque of proximal unfatigued muscles, the elbow flexors. Fatigue-sensitive group III/IV muscle nociceptors act to limit voluntary drive not only to fatigued muscles but also to unfatigued muscles within the same limb.


2002 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 92-98 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandr M. Degtyarenko ◽  
Marc P. Kaufman

In decerebrate paralyzed cats, we examined the responses of 18 spinoreticular neurons to electrical stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region. The activity of each of the spinoreticular neurons was recorded extracellularly from laminae IV through VI of the L7 and S1 spinal cord. In addition, each of the 18 spinoreticular neurons received group III afferent input from the tibial nerve. Spinoreticular projections were established for each of 18 neurons by antidromic invasion of the ventro lateral medulla at the P11 though P14 levels. The onset latencies and current thresholds for antidromic invasion from the ventro lateral medulla averaged 15.0 ± 3.8 ms and 117 ± 11 μA, respectively. Electrical stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region attenuated the spontaneous activity or the responses of each of the spinoreticular neurons to tibial nerve stimulation at currents that recruited group III afferents. Our data support the notion that thin-fiber muscle afferent input to the ventrolateral medulla is gated by a central command to exercise.


1983 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 649-661 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. D. Kniffki ◽  
K. Mizumura

1. The responses evoked by electrical stimulation of cutaneous and muscle nerves, by noxious and innocuous mechanical stimulation of muscle, tendon, and cutaneous tissues, and by intra-arterial (ia) injection of algesic substances (potassium, bradykinin) into arteries supplying the gastrocnemius-soleus muscle (GS) were studied in single neurons located in the ventroposterolateral nucleus (VPL) and in the transitional zone between VPL and the ventrolateral nucleus (VL) of cats lightly anesthetized with thiopenthal. Such chemical stimulation of the muscles has been shown to activate muscular groups III and IV axons specifically (43, 44) and presumably is nociceptive in character (14, 17, 31). 2. One hundred eight neurons were tested. Eighty-three of the units responded only to various types of cutaneous stimulation of the hindlimb. The other 25 responded to algesic stimulation of muscle and/or tendon. Of these latter 25, 7 had no apparent cutaneous receptive field although 4 of them responded to electrical stimulation of the common peroneal and/or sural nerve. Thus, only three neurons responded exclusively to algesic chemical and noxious mechanical stimulation of the muscle. Of the other 18 neurons, 14 had cutaneous receptive fields restricted to the hindlimb and often responded to non-noxious repetitive light stroking and to noxious pinching with a high-frequency discharge. Four cells (two of which had cutaneous input only from low-threshold mechanoreceptors) had complex and large receptive fields extending to more than one limb. 3. Potassium was a more potent muscle receptor stimulant than bradykinin, the latter only weakly exciting 3 neurons of 24 tested with both substances. The responses to potassium were rapid (approximately 4.0 s in latency) and tended to be greater (have higher response rates) for the units that responded to cutaneous as well as muscle/tendon stimulation. 4. Most neurons that responded to noxious deep stimulation had a threshold for the GS nerve volley in the group III fiber range. The few neurons with thresholds slightly below the group III range did not respond to activation of group I or II muscle spindle afferents by intra-arterial application of succinylcholine or by stretching the muscle. 5. Neurons with responses to any of the muscle, tendon, or cutaneous nociceptive stimuli were located at the ventral and dorsal periphery of VPL and in the VPL-VL transitional zone. 6. These results strongly suggest that there exist regions within the lateral diencephalon of cats that are capable of processing nociceptive information and that these regions are located at the periphery of VPL.


2006 ◽  
Vol 290 (6) ◽  
pp. H2239-H2246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shawn G. Hayes ◽  
Angela E. Kindig ◽  
Marc P. Kaufman

Cyclooxygenase products accumulate in statically contracting muscles to stimulate group III and IV afferents. The role played by these products in stimulating thin fiber muscle afferents during dynamic exercise is unknown. Therefore, in decerebrated cats, we recorded the responses of 17 group III and 12 group IV triceps surae muscle afferents to dynamic exercise, evoked by stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region. Each afferent was tested while the muscles were freely perfused and while the circulation to the muscles was occluded. The increases in group III and IV afferent activity during dynamic exercise while the circulation to the muscles was occluded were greater than those during exercise while the muscles were freely perfused ( P < 0.01). Indomethacin (5 mg/kg iv), a cyclooxygenase blocker, reduced the responses to dynamic exercise of the group III afferents by 42% when the circulation to the triceps surae muscles was occluded ( P < 0.001) and by 29% when the circulation was not occluded ( P = 0.004). Likewise, indomethacin reduced the responses to dynamic exercise of group IV afferents by 34% when the circulation was occluded ( P < 0.001) and by 18% when the circulation was not occluded ( P = 0.026). Before indomethacin, the activity of the group IV, but not group III, afferents was significantly higher during postexercise circulatory occlusion than during rest ( P < 0.05). After indomethacin, however, group IV activity during postexercise circulatory occlusion was not significantly different from group IV activity during rest. Our data suggest that cyclooxygenase products play a role both in sensitizing group III and IV afferents during exercise and in stimulating group IV afferents during postexercise circulatory occlusion.


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