Abstract

1. Electrophysiological techniques were used to study the sacral parasympathetic pathway to the colon of the cat. 2. Electrical stimulation of the sacral ventral roots or the pelvic nerve elicited contractions of the colon and firing in nerve filaments on the serosal surface of the colon. Both responses were markedly reduced by the administration of ganglionic blocking agents. It is concluded that sacral preganglionic fibres to the colon make synaptic contacts with extramural ganglion cells. These cells were identified histologically in small ganglia on the serosal surface of the distal colon and rectum. 3. Transmission in extramural colonic ganglia was cholinergic and mediated by nicotinic receptors. Colonic ganglia did not exhibit large recruiting responses during repetitive (1-4 c/s) preganglionic nerve stimulation or an adrenergic inhibitory mechanism, both of which have been identified in bladder parasympathetic ganglia. It is concluded that colonic ganglia unlike bladder function primarily as simple relay stations and have little potential for modulating the neral activity arising in the central nervus system. 4. The preganglionic input to colonic ganglia was mediated by C fibres with maximal conduction velocities ranging from 0-5 to 1-4 m/sec. Bladder ganglia, on the other hand, received a preganglionic input composed of B fibres with maximal conduction velocities ranging from 8 to 10 m/sec. The possible physiological significance of different types of preganglionic fibres in the sacral outflow is discussed.

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