Abstract

These experiments were designed to study the effects of vestibular nerve stimulation on the activity of hindlimb motoneuron pools. Two techniques were used to stimulate the vestibular nerves of precollicularly decerebrated cats. In one set of experiments the individual semicircular canals were stimulated via bipolar electrodes placed near the canal nerves. In the second series of experiments the whole vestibular nerve was stimulated with an electrode placed on the intradural nerve. Activity in the hindlimb motoneuron pools was ascertained by evoking monosynaptic reflexes in the various hindlimb nerves. Stimulation of the individual semicircular canals produced response patterns that varied with both the vestibular branch being stimulated and the hindlimb nerve being conditioned. Intradural stimulation of the vestibular nerve, on the other hand, evoked similar response patterns in the antagonist ankle flexor and extensor nerves. The most common pattern consisted of facilitation followed by a period of inhibition. Lesions of descending fiber tracts produced results which suggest the presence of a diffuse pathway, involving the recitular formation, which mediates the observed responses. It is suggested that the biphasic response pattern is analogous to the startle response and the function of the responses is discussed in that context.

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