scholarly journals Optimal delineation of single C-tactile and C-nociceptive afferents in humans by latency slowing

2017 ◽  
Vol 117 (4) ◽  
pp. 1608-1614 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger H. Watkins ◽  
Johan Wessberg ◽  
Helena Backlund Wasling ◽  
James P. Dunham ◽  
Håkan Olausson ◽  
...  

C-mechanoreceptors in humans comprise a population of unmyelinated afferents exhibiting a wide range of mechanical sensitivities. C-mechanoreceptors are putatively divided into those signaling gentle touch (C-tactile afferents, CTs) and nociception (C-mechanosensitive nociceptors, CMs), giving rise to positive and negative affect, respectively. We sought to distinguish, compare, and contrast the properties of a population of human C-mechanoreceptors to see how fundamental the divisions between these putative subpopulations are. We used microneurography to record from individual afferents in humans and applied electrical and mechanical stimulation to their receptive fields. We show that C-mechanoreceptors can be distinguished unequivocally into two putative populations, comprising CTs and CMs, by electrically evoked spike latency changes (slowing). After both natural mechanical stimulation and repetitive electrical stimulation there was markedly less latency slowing in CTs compared with CMs. Electrical receptive field stimulation, which bypasses the receptor end organ, was most effective in classifying C-mechanoreceptors, as responses to mechanical receptive field stimulation overlapped somewhat, which may lead to misclassification. Furthermore, we report a subclass of low-threshold CM responding to gentle mechanical stimulation and a potential subclass of CT afferent displaying burst firing. We show that substantial differences exist in the mechanisms governing axonal conduction between CTs and CMs. We provide clear electrophysiological “signatures” (extent of latency slowing) that can be used in unequivocally identifying populations of C-mechanoreceptors in single-unit and multiunit microneurography studies and in translational animal research into affective touch. Additionally, these differential mechanisms may be pharmacologically targetable for separate modulation of positive and negative affective touch information. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Human skin encodes a plethora of touch interactions, and affective tactile information is primarily signaled by slowly conducting C-mechanoreceptive afferents. We show that electrical stimulation of low-threshold C-tactile afferents produces markedly different patterns of activity compared with high-threshold C-mechanoreceptive nociceptors, although the populations overlap in their responses to mechanical stimulation. This fundamental distinction demonstrates a divergence in affective touch signaling from the first stage of sensory processing, having implications for the processing of interpersonal touch.

1975 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 572-586 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. E. Applebaum ◽  
J. E. Beall ◽  
R. D. Foreman ◽  
W. D. Willis

A technique is described for recording from axons belonging to the spinothalamic tract of the monkey. The axons arose from cell bodies located within the spinal cord since the latency of orthodromic activation by afferents within the dorsal funiculus was short. The axons were antidromically activated from the ipsilateral diencephalon. The spectrum of conduction velocities indicates that the recordings favored large-diamter axons. However, all of the classes of spinothalamic tract units described from soma-dendritic recordings were represented in the sample. When the locations of the axons in the ventrolateral white matter were mapped, there was virtually complete overlap in the distributions of hair-activated, low-, and high-threshold spinothalamic tract axons, suggesting that the "lateral spinothalamic tract" conveys tactile, as well as pain and temperature, information. The only segregated population of axons were those belonging to units activated by receptors in deep tissues, including muscle. These were in a band along the ventral surface of the cord. The stimulus points for antidromically activating spinothalamic cells of axons were in the known diencephalic course of the spinothalamic tract, including the ventral posterior lateral nucleus. Stimulus point locations were similar for high-threshold and other categories of units. Receptive-field sizes were smaller for high-threshold spinothalamic cells or axons than for hair-activated or low-threshold units. Receptive-field size was correlated with position on the hindlimb. The smallest fields belonged to cells in lamina I, with progressively larger sizes for cells in laminae IV and V. Receptive-field shape was evaluated by the length/width ratio, which was smallest for high-threshold units and progressively larger for low-threshold and hair-activated units. The receptive-field positions of spinothalamic tract axons were related to the locations of the axons. There was a rough somatotopic representation in the tract, with the most caudal dermatomes represented dorsolaterally, and the most rostral ventromedially.


1980 ◽  
Vol 43 (6) ◽  
pp. 1673-1699 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Golovchinsky

1. The responses of single cuneate neurons to controled mechanical stimulation of skin were recorded in cats lightly anesthetized with a nitrous oxide-halothane mixture. The discharge patterns and peripheral receptive-field characteristics were studied in neurons driven by sensitive cutaneous mechanoreceptors, including slowly adapting skin mechanoreceptors. Virtually all cuneate neurons display maximum discharge during the velocity component of displacement. 2. Among cuneate neurons encountered in this study, approximately 46% were driven by guard hair mechanoreceptors, 15% were driven by field receptors, and 13% were driven by slowly adapting skin receptors. Neurons responding to stimulation of deep tissues (including claws) were not studied with controlled mechanical stimulation and accounted for 19%. The rest of the neurons were driven by Pacinian corpuscles, received afferent inputs from several different first-order afferents, or were not definitely identified. There was no clear evidence of down hair or high-threshold mechanoreceptor representation. 3. The discharge pattern in response to a constant-velocity stimulus proved most valuable in describing submodality classes of neurons driven by hair and field receptors since sensitivity of these neurons to dynamic and to static phases of stimulation constitute respective continua and, thus, preclude sharp separation into distinct groups. 4. The majority of neurons displayed response properties and receptive fields similar to those of first-order afferents. A minority of cells had receptive fields that were larger than those of primary afferents, with nearly identical modality and velocity characteristics throughout the receptive field. 5. Approximately 2% of recorded neurons displayed convergent properties not encountered in first-order afferents, including neurons driven from receptors of different modalities or from discontinuous receptive fields. 6. Inhibition of neuronal firing generated from outside the receptive field was rarely seen, possibly due to anesthetic conditions. In a small number of neurons, irregularities in the discharge were observed that might indicate inhibitory influences originating from within the receptive field.


1991 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 1205-1217 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. Lewin ◽  
S. B. McMahon

1. We have studied the physiology of sensory neurons innervating skin of the rat hindlimb, in three groups of animals: 1) normal animals; 2) animals in which the sural nerve (Sn) had regenerated to its original cutaneous target; and 3) animals in which the gastrocnemius muscle nerve (Gn) had previously been cut and cross anastomosed with the distal stump of the cut Sn so that its axons regenerated to a foreign target, skin. 2. Single-unit recordings were made from 222 afferents in normal, intact animals. They had conduction velocities of 0.5-53.1 m/s. The conduction velocity distribution had distinct peaks at approximately 37.5, 2.5, and 1.25 m/s, presumably corresponding to A alpha beta-, A delta-, and C-fiber populations. Eighty-two percent of the characterized myelinated fibers had low-threshold mechanosensitive receptive fields, whereas 16% were high threshold, and only 2% appeared to have no receptive field. The very large majority of low-threshold mechanosensitive receptive fields (87%) were rapidly adapting hair follicle afferents. 3. In animals with regenerated Sn, 308 afferents were recorded with conduction velocities of 0.4-58.8 m/s. However, the mean conduction velocity was lower than in control animals (P less than 0.05), and only one peak, at 27.5 m/s, was apparent for myelinated fibers. Eighty-six percent of myelinated fibers were low-threshold mechanosensitive afferents, 8.5% were high-threshold mechanoreceptors (HTMRs), and 5.5% appeared to have no receptive fields. Fewer low-threshold mechanoreceptors (LTMRs; compared with controls) were activated by hair movement (63 vs. 87%). Most of the remainder appeared to be field receptors (which were therefore more commonly observed here than in normal animals). 4. In animals in which the Gn had regenerated to skin, 430 afferents were recorded. These had conduction velocities ranging from 0.6 to 71.4 m/s, and again only one peak was apparent in the myelinated conduction velocity histogram, at approximately 17.5 m/s. Of the myelinated fibers, 79% had low-threshold mechanosensitive receptive fields in skin and 10% high-threshold mechanosensitive receptive fields. The remaining 11% apparently had no receptive field (cf. 5.5% in regenerated Sn). In contrast to normal or regrown sural afferents, only 58% of low-threshold gastrocnemius afferents in skin were rapidly adapting. Of the 42% slowly adapting afferents, many surprisingly responded to hair movement. Thus some gastrocnemius afferents seemed to have retained the adaptation properties characteristic of muscle afferents. Also surprisingly, given that the Gn contains fewer fibers than the Sn, receptive-field areas were not significantly different from regrown or normal sural fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


1985 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 491-501 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. K. Shea ◽  
E. R. Perl

The cutaneous receptive properties of unmyelinated (C) fibers of the rabbit's great auricular nerve were determined by single-unit recordings. The majority of C-fiber units could be excited by cutaneous stimulation, and such sensory units fell into three major categories on the basis of responses to mechanical and thermal stimulation of their cutaneous receptive fields: low-threshold mechanoreceptors, nociceptors, or specific thermoreceptors. The majority of afferent elements were nociceptive, and all nociceptors responded to strong mechanical stimulation. Three types of nociceptors could be distinguished by their responses to thermal stimuli. Polymodal nociceptors responded to heat with thresholds of 40-55 degrees C and typically displayed enhanced responses or sensitization after noxious heating of their receptive fields. High-threshold mechanoreceptors failed to respond promptly to heat before noxious cutaneous stimulation which, however, elicited subsequent back-ground activity or sensitivity to heat. A third type of nociceptor responded to cold but not to heat. Low-threshold mechanoreceptors were identified by their brisk responses to very gentle, slowly moving mechanical stimulation of their receptive fields, and were readily distinguished from any element classified as nociceptive by their lower mechanical thresholds. Rapid innocuous warming or cooling excited some of the low-threshold mechanoreceptors. Specific thermoreceptors, both warming and cooling types, were rare, insensitive to mechanical stimulation, and responded to very slight changes in temperature. In contrast to the sensitization to heat, which was characteristic of most nociceptors, specific warming receptors displayed depressed thermal responses after noxious heating of their receptive fields. These results provide further evidence of the similarity of C-fiber receptors innervating hairy skin of different species. Some differences from past reports and additional features are described.


1995 ◽  
Vol 73 (2) ◽  
pp. 693-702 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. R. Koerber ◽  
K. Mirnics ◽  
L. M. Mendell

1. The tibial and sural nerves in cats were cut, anastomosed to their distal stumps, and allowed to regenerate for 3-17.5 mo. In the terminal acute experiment, individual afferents were impaled in the dorsal root ganglion to study their receptive field properties, somatic spike parameters, and spinal projections using cord dorsum potential (CDP) measurements. Properties of the CDPs provided evidence on whether the afferent fibers were originally proprioceptive or cutaneous (rapidly or slowly adapting). 2. Fibers with the largest conduction velocity were selectively slowly adapting, suggesting that large muscle afferents maintained their adaptation properties regardless of the peripheral structure innervated. Similarly, the relationship of somatic spike configuration to mechanical threshold was largely normal. Cells with narrow spikes innervated low-threshold mechanoreceptors, whereas cells with broad spikes and an inflection on the descending limb innervated high-threshold mechanoreceptors. 3. Spikes with intermediate properties were observed in some cells that innervated low-threshold mechanoreceptors in the periphery. These were classified as "hybrid" spikes. 4. The largest CDPs were evoked by afferents classified as having originally been cutaneous fibers, regardless of whether they had reinnervated cutaneous or subcutaneous receptors. Fibers classified as has having originally been proprioceptive afferents produced much smaller CDPs; however, these afferents never produce CDPs in intact preparations. Afferents nonresponsive to peripheral stimulation, classified putatively as having been cutaneous, also evoked small CDPs. 5. Fibers classified as putatively cutaneous or proprioceptive could reinnervate foreign target tissue (subcutaneous tissue or skin, respectively), but a propensity to reinnervate the original target tissue was observed. 6. Among putative cutaneous afferents, those with rostrocaudal CDP distributions somatotopically correct for the location of their receptive fields evoked the largest CDPs regardless of the peripheral tissue innervated. 7. We conclude that receptive field properties (adaptation, mechanical threshold) of regenerated afferents are well matched with the electrophysiological properties of the soma and axon. The properties of the central projections of these afferents are not as well matched with their peripheral receptor properties. This is discussed in terms of the plasticity of the central projections of axotomized afferents.


1986 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 56-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. A. Olsson ◽  
K. Sasamoto ◽  
J. P. Lund

Eighty-one sensory neurons in the rostral trigeminal sensory nuclei (main sensory nucleus, nucleus oralis, and the lateral border zone of the motor nucleus) were recorded in urethan-anesthetized rabbits before and during mastication. Receptive-field characteristics were described, and responses evoked by electrical stimulation of the inferior alveolar and infraorbital nerves, sensorimotor cortex, and thalamus were recorded. Forty-four percent of neurons were stimulated by the movements of mastication; nevertheless, evidence is presented that the excitability of the 49 neurons that receive low-threshold mechanoreceptor inputs is depressed during mastication for the following reasons: The spontaneous activity of seven cells was inhibited during movement. The probability of firing in response to stimulation of the peripheral nerve on sensorimotor cortex was decreased during mastication. There was usually a corresponding increase in the latency of the action potentials. Injections of local anesthetic (prilocaine hydrochloride, 4%) into the receptive field of the neuron did not prevent the decrease in excitability during mastication. Fourteen neurons that received inputs from periodontal pressoreceptors were recorded medial to most of the low-threshold group. The excitability of six of these was reduced during jaw closure and during the occlusal phase of movement, that is, within the period in which they would be activated by pressure on the teeth. The rest were tonically suppressed. Eighteen neurons recorded in the lateral border zone of the motor nucleus had receptive fields that were of high threshold or were undefined. They responded to stimulation of the peripheral nerve at high threshold. The excitability of most of these neurons was strongly phase modulated during mastication. They were most excitable during jaw closure or during the occlusal phase of movement and inexcitable during opening. The excitability of the others was tonically depressed. In most cases, the changes in excitability described did not seem to be due to the patterns of activity of the neurons that were generated by the movements. We conclude that the pattern elaborated by the central pattern generator includes selective modifications of sensory transmission. One reason for this is to suppress reflex responses to low-threshold inputs while maintaining the protective response to tissue damage.


1976 ◽  
Vol 39 (3) ◽  
pp. 613-630 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Singer ◽  
F. Tretter

An attempt was made to relate the alterations of cortical receptive fields as they result from binocular visual deprivation to changes in afferent, intrinsic, and efferent connections of the striate and parastriate cortex. The experiments were performed in cats aged at least 1 jr with their eyelids sutured closed from birth.The results of the receptive-field analysis in A17 confirmed the reduction of light-responsive cells, the occasional incongruity of receptive-field properties in the two eyes, and to some extent also the loss of orientation and direction selectivity as reported previously. Other properties common to numerous deprived receptive fields were the lack of sharp inhibitory sidebands and the sometimes exceedingly large size of the receptive fields. Qualitatively as well as quantitatively, similar alterations were observed in area 18. A rather high percentage of cells in both areas had, however, preserved at least some orientation preference, and a few receptive fields had tuning properties comparable to those in normal cats. The ability of area 18 cells in normal cats to respond to much higher stimulus velocities than area 17 cells was not influenced by deprivation.The results obtained with electrical stimulation suggest two main deprivation effects: 1) A marked decrease in the safety factor of retinothalamic and thalamocortical transmission. 2) A clear decrease in efficiency of intracortical inhibition. But the electrical stimulation data also show that none of the basic principles of afferent, intrinsic, and efferent connectivity is lost or changed by deprivation. The conduction velocities in the subcortical afferents and the differentiation of the afferents to areas 17 and 18 into slow- and fast-conducting projection systems remain unaltered. Intrinsic excitatory connections remain functional; this is also true for the disynaptic inhibitory pathways activated preferentially by the fast-conducting thalamocortical projection. The laminar distribution of cells with monosynaptic versus polsynaptic excitatory connections is similar to that in normal cats. Neurons with corticofugal axons remain functionally connected and show the same connectivity pattern as those in normal cats. The nonspecific activation system from the mesencephalic reticular formation also remains functioning both at the thalamic and the cortical level.We conclude from these and several other observations that most, if not all, afferent, intrinsic, and efferent connections of areas 17 and 18 are specified from birth and depend only little on visual experience. This predetermined structural plan, however, allows for some freedom in the domain of orientation tuning, binocular correspondence, and retinotopy which is specified only when visual experience is possible.


1989 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 854-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Laird ◽  
F. Cervero

1. Single-unit electrical activity has been recorded from 42 dorsal horn neurons in the sacral segments of the rat's spinal cord. The sample consisted of 20 multireceptive (class 2) cells with both A- and C-fiber inputs and 22 nocireceptive (class 3) cells. All neurons had cutaneous receptive fields (RFs) on the tail. 2. The RF sizes of the cells and their response thresholds to mechanical stimulation of the skin were determined before and after each of a series of 2-min noxious mechanical stimuli. Up to five such stimuli were delivered at intervals ranging from 10 to 60 min. In most cases, only one cell per animal was tested. 3. The majority of neurons were tested in barbiturate-anesthetized animals. However, to test whether or not this anesthetic influenced the results obtained, experiments were also performed in halothane-anesthetized and decerebrate-spinal preparations. The results from these experiments are considered separately. 4. All of the neurons responded vigorously to the first noxious pinch stimulus and all but one to the rest of the stimuli in the series. The responses of the neurons varied from stimulus to stimulus, but there were no detectable trends in the two groups of cells. 5. The RFs of the class 2 cells showed large increases (624.3 +/- 175.8 mm2, mean +/- SE) after the application of the pinch stimuli. The RFs of the class 3 neurons, which were initially smaller than those of the class 2 cells, either did not increase in size or showed very small increases after the pinch stimuli (38.3 +/- 11.95 mm2, mean +/- SE). 6. Some cells in both groups (6/10 class 2 cells and 7/16 class 3 cells) showed a decrease in mechanical threshold as a result of the noxious mechanical stimulus, but none of the class 3 cells' thresholds dropped below 20 mN into the low-threshold range. 7. The results obtained in the halothane-anesthetized and decerebrate-spinal animals were very similar to those seen in the barbiturate-anesthetized experiments, with the exception that in the decerebrate-spinal animals, the RFs of the class 2 cells were initially larger and showed only small increases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2003 ◽  
Vol 89 (6) ◽  
pp. 3190-3204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcia W. Raggio ◽  
Christoph E. Schreiner

Patterns of threshold distributions for single-cycle sinusoidal electrical stimulation and single pulse electrical stimulation were compared in primary auditory cortex of the adult cat. Furthermore, the effects of auditory deprivation on these distributions were evaluated and compared across three groups of adult cats. Threshold distributions for single and multiple unit responses from the middle cortical layers were obtained on the ectosylvian gyrus in an acutely implanted animal; 2 wk after deafening and implantation (short-term group); and neonatally deafened animals implanted following 2–5 yr of deafness (long-term group). For all three cases, we observed similar patterns of circumscribed regions of low response thresholds in the region of primary auditory cortex (AI). A dorsal and a ventral region of low response thresholds were found separated by a narrow, anterior-posterior strip of elevated thresholds. The ventral low-threshold regions in the short-term group were cochleotopically arranged. By contrast, the dorsal region in the short-term animals and both low-threshold regions in long-term deafened animals maintained only weak cochleotopicity. Analysis of the spatial extent of the low-threshold regions revealed that the activated area for sinusoidal stimulation was smaller and more circumscribed than for pulsatile stimulation for both dorsal and ventral AI. The width of the high-threshold ridge that separated the dorsal and ventral low-threshold regions was greater for sinusoidal stimulation. Sinusoidal and pulsatile threshold behavior differed significantly for electrode configurations with low and high minimum thresholds. Differences in threshold behavior and cortical response distributions between the sinusoidal and pulsatile stimulation suggest that stimulus shape plays a significant role in the activation of cortical activity. Differences in the activation pattern for short-term and long-term deafness reflect deafness-induced reorganizational changes based on factors such as differences in excitatory and inhibitory balance that are affected by the stimulation parameters.


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