Mechanical factors influencing response of joint afferent neurons from cat knee

1975 ◽  
Vol 38 (6) ◽  
pp. 1473-1484 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Grigg

The responses of 67 slowly adapting joint afferent neurons in cat posterior articular nerve (PAN) were studied in relation to mechanical stimulation of the knee. The response of most neurons could be interpreted in terms of the stretching of joint tissues resulting from angular displacement of the knee. No neurons discharged at angles intermediate between the limits of movement of the joint. The limits of movement of the joint were operationally defined in terms of displacements resulting from applied torques.

2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (5) ◽  
pp. 2387-2398 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph A. DiCaprio ◽  
Harald Wolf ◽  
Ansgar Büschges

Mechanosensory neurons exhibit a wide range of dynamic changes in response, including rapid and slow adaptation. In addition to mechanical factors, electrical processes may also contribute to sensory adaptation. We have investigated adaptation of afferent neurons in the stick insect femoral chordotonal organ (fCO). The fCO contains sensory neurons that respond to position, velocity, and acceleration of the tibia. We describe the influence of random mechanical stimulation of the fCO on the response of fCO afferent neurons. The activity of individual sensory neurons was recorded intracellularly from their axons in the main leg nerve. Most fCO afferents (93%) exhibited a marked decrease in response to trapezoidal stimuli following sustained white noise stimulation (bandwidth = 60 Hz, amplitudes from ±5 to ±30°). Concurrent decreases in the synaptic drive to leg motoneurons and interneurons were also observed. Electrical stimulation of spike activity in individual fCO afferents in the absence of mechanical stimulation also led to a dramatic decrease in response in 15 of 19 afferents tested. This indicated that electrical processes are involved in the regulation of the generator potential or encoding of action potentials and partially responsible for the decreased response of the afferents. Replacing Ca2+ with Ba2+ in the saline surrounding the fCO greatly reduced or blocked the decrease in response elicited by electrically induced activity or mechanical stimulation when compared with control responses. Our results indicate that activity of fCO sensory neurons strongly affects their sensitivity, most likely via Ca2+-dependent processes.


1991 ◽  
Vol 65 (5) ◽  
pp. 1067-1077 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Janig ◽  
M. Koltzenburg

1. Conscious perception of noxious and innocuous distension of the colon as well as the reflex control of anal continence and defecation largely depend on an intact sacral primary afferent innervation. Here we have studied the functional properties of these visceral primary afferent neurons in the dorsal root S2 in 17 cats. Single fibers projecting into the pelvic nerve were identified electrically and studied with innocuous and noxious mechanical stimulation of colon and anal canal. 2. A total of 59 units responding to one of these stimuli were investigated and they could be separated into two subpopulations of afferents. Thirty-six fibers were reproducibly excited by distension of the colon, but not by mechanical stimulation of the anal canal. They were thin myelinated or unmyelinated fibers with a median conduction velocity of 3.2 m/s. The remaining 23 units had receptive fields in the mucosa of the anal canal and responded readily to an innocuous proximodistal shearing stimulus, but not to distension stimuli applied to the same area. All, but two of these afferents were thin myelinated with a median conduction velocity of 7.7 m/s, which was significantly different from the conduction velocity of afferent neurons responding to distension of the colon. 3. Units responding to distension of the colon had thresholds in the innocuous range of the intracolonic pressure. Receptors that were activated only by noxious intraluminal pressure were absent. On the basis of their response to supramaximal isotonic distension, colonic afferents could be subclassified as phasic (n = 17) or tonic (n = 19) units. Phasic afferents were only transiently excited during filling or emptying of the colon, whereas tonic afferents discharged throughout the distension. The two populations had also significantly different median conduction velocities of 8.0 (n = 16) and 1.7 (n = 15) m/s, respectively. 4. Stimulation response functions were evaluated for 12 tonic afferents. All units encoded an increase of intracolonic pressure by the intensity of their discharge frequency. Increases of intracolonic pressure produced significantly higher discharge frequencies from unmyelinated than from thin myelinated afferents. 5. In three animals the percentage of unmyelinated fibers responding to mechanical stimulation of colon and anal canal was determined. Out of 213 electrically identified unmyelinated units projecting into the pelvic nerve, only 11 (5.2%) were excited. Thus, acute innocuous and noxious mechanical stimuli of the large intestine do not appear to be the adequate stimulus for the large majority of unmyelinated pelvic afferents. 6. In conclusion, distension of the colon and mechanical stimulation of the anal canal activates distinct populations of primary afferent neurons.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A83-A83
Author(s):  
M KIM ◽  
N JAVED ◽  
F CHRISTOFI ◽  
H COOKE

2003 ◽  
Vol 773 ◽  
Author(s):  
James D. Kubicek ◽  
Stephanie Brelsford ◽  
Philip R. LeDuc

AbstractMechanical stimulation of single cells has been shown to affect cellular behavior from the molecular scale to ultimate cell fate including apoptosis and proliferation. In this, the ability to control the spatiotemporal application of force on cells through their extracellular matrix connections is critical to understand the cellular response of mechanotransduction. Here, we develop and utilize a novel pressure-driven equibiaxial cell stretching device (PECS) combined with an elastomeric material to control specifically the mechanical stimulation on single cells. Cells were cultured on silicone membranes coated with molecular matrices and then a uniform pressure was introduced to the opposite surface of the membrane to stretch single cells equibiaxially. This allowed us to apply mechanical deformation to investigate the complex nature of cell shape and structure. These results will enhance our knowledge of cellular and molecular function as well as provide insights into fields including biomechanics, tissue engineering, and drug discovery.


2012 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 717-722 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhao-Xiang HUANG ◽  
Jia-En ZHANG ◽  
Kai-Ming LIANG ◽  
Guo-Ming QUAN ◽  
Ben-Liang ZHAO

2011 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 545-556 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huei-Wen Wu ◽  
Chun-Che Lin ◽  
Shiaw-Min Hwang ◽  
Yu-Jen Chang ◽  
Gwo-Bin Lee

Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 474
Author(s):  
Silvia Todros ◽  
Silvia Spadoni ◽  
Edoardo Maghin ◽  
Martina Piccoli ◽  
Piero G. Pavan

Muscular tissue regeneration may be enhanced in vitro by means of mechanical stimulation, inducing cellular alignment and the growth of functional fibers. In this work, a novel bioreactor is designed for the radial stimulation of porcine-derived diaphragmatic scaffolds aiming at the development of clinically relevant tissue patches. A Finite Element (FE) model of the bioreactor membrane is developed, considering two different methods for gripping muscular tissue patch during the stimulation, i.e., suturing and clamping with pliers. Tensile tests are carried out on fresh and decellularized samples of porcine diaphragmatic tissue, and a fiber-reinforced hyperelastic constitutive model is assumed to describe the mechanical behavior of tissue patches. Numerical analyses are carried out by applying pressure to the bioreactor membrane and evaluating tissue strain during the stimulation phase. The bioreactor designed in this work allows one to mechanically stimulate tissue patches in a radial direction by uniformly applying up to 30% strain. This can be achieved by adopting pliers for tissue clamping. Contrarily, the use of sutures is not advisable, since high strain levels are reached in suturing points, exceeding the physiological strain range and possibly leading to tissue laceration. FE analysis allows the optimization of the bioreactor configuration in order to ensure an efficient transduction of mechanical stimuli while preventing tissue damage.


1911 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 217-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Canby Robinson ◽  
George Draper

In hearts showing auricular fibrillation mechanical stimulation of the right vagus nerve causes, as a rule, marked slowing or stoppage of ventricular rhythm, without producing any appreciable effect in the electrocardiographic record of the auricular fibrillation. The ventricular pauses are apparently due to the blocking of stimuli from the auricles. The force of ventricular systole is distinctly weakened for several beats after vagus stimulation, and ectopic ventricular systoles have been seen in several instances, apparently the result of the vagus action. There may, in some cases, be lowered excitability of the ventricles, while no constant change is seen in the size of the electrical complexes representing ventricular systole.


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