Abstract

In the lateral longissimus muscle (LL) of ovariectomized, female rats anesthetized with low surgical doses of urethane (1.0 g/kg), cutaneous reflexes with similar EMG and response patterns could be elicited from CNS-intact rats and from rats 24 h after complete thoracic spinal cord transection. The probability of eliciting a response to contralateral cutaneous nerve stimulation alone is much lower in rats with complete spinal transections compared to CNS-intact rats. For both CNS-intact and spinal-transected rats, responses to ipsilateral cutaneous nerve stimulation had a shorter latency and required significantly less current on average than responses to contralateral stimulation. The respective currents for eliciting threshold responses to ipsi- and contralateral stimulation are less for CNS-intact than spinal-transected rats. For both CNS-intact and spinal-transected rats, responses to bilateral cutaneous nerve stimulation were inconsistent in the same animal from run to run. With the variability of response at this anesthetic level, no consistent effects of progesterone (acute, i.v.) or estrogen (acute, i.v. and pretreatment, s.c.) were observed in spinal-transected rats. Intravenous progesterone reduced early, unilateral responses in CNS-intact rats anesthetized with 1.0 g of urethane/kg. For both CNS-intact and spinal-transected rats, additional anesthesia during EMG recording produced a gradual decline in response magnitude which could be recovered with a modest increase in stimulus intensity. However, spinal-transected rats appear to require less anesthesia to reduce comparable responses. The results suggest that supraspinal input is especially effective for facilitating contralateral cutaneous reflexes in back muscles, whereas it contributes more equally with afferent input and segmental circuitry to the efficacy of ipsilateral cutaneous reflexes.

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