In anaesthetized and curarized cats electrical stimulation of the lumbar sympathetic trunk, at frequencies within the physiological range, induces the development of a small tension in superficial lumbrical muscles (50-100 mg in different preparations). This effect can be reproduced in anaesthetized and curarized cats by stimulating the peripheral stump of the tibial nerve with parameters adequate to activate the entire C-fibre group, and therefore postganglionic sympathetic fibers. The collision technique was used to evaluate in the tibial nerve possible changes in afferent activity from the skinned foot. It was found that an increase of non-cutaneous activity consistently occurs in A beta and, occasionally, in A alpha fibre groups. Secondary and primary spindle afferents, respectively, belong to these fibre groups. It was also found that: (1) the tension development in lumbrical muscles and the increase of the afferent activity of non-cutaneous origin exhibit similar time courses; (2) the two events are affected in parallel by the same stimulus parameters; (3) both events are abolished by alpha-adrenoceptor antagonists. Therefore the possibility of a sympathetic fusimotor action affecting mainly secondary afferents is suggested and discussed.
Tension development in lumbrical muscles and concomitant increase of activity in A alpha and A beta afferents during sympathetic stimulation in the cat.
PASSATORE, Magda
1987-01-01
Abstract
In anaesthetized and curarized cats electrical stimulation of the lumbar sympathetic trunk, at frequencies within the physiological range, induces the development of a small tension in superficial lumbrical muscles (50-100 mg in different preparations). This effect can be reproduced in anaesthetized and curarized cats by stimulating the peripheral stump of the tibial nerve with parameters adequate to activate the entire C-fibre group, and therefore postganglionic sympathetic fibers. The collision technique was used to evaluate in the tibial nerve possible changes in afferent activity from the skinned foot. It was found that an increase of non-cutaneous activity consistently occurs in A beta and, occasionally, in A alpha fibre groups. Secondary and primary spindle afferents, respectively, belong to these fibre groups. It was also found that: (1) the tension development in lumbrical muscles and the increase of the afferent activity of non-cutaneous origin exhibit similar time courses; (2) the two events are affected in parallel by the same stimulus parameters; (3) both events are abolished by alpha-adrenoceptor antagonists. Therefore the possibility of a sympathetic fusimotor action affecting mainly secondary afferents is suggested and discussed.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.