Abstract

The bulbocavernosus (BC) reflex, produced in the BC motor nerve in response to electrical stimulation of the contralateral pudendal sensory nerve, was investigated in intact, castrated, and testosterone-treated castrated male rats under urethane anesthesia. No significant group differences in the reflex latency, sensory or motor conduction velocity, or central delay were observed. A conditioning pulse to the pudendal sensory nerve caused suppression of the averaged antidromic field potential recorded in the contralateral spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus (SNB) after stimulation of the SNB axons in the BC motor nerve. The suppression occurred at 6- to 35-ms intervals between shocks to pudendal sensory nerve and BC motor nerve, and was markedly smaller in castrated males than in the other two groups. In contrast, a conditioning pulse to the contralateral BC motor nerve had no effect on the SNB antidromic field potential. These results indicate that androgen modulates the efficacy of synaptic transmission onto SNB motoneurons or other neurons involved in the BC reflex.

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