Abstract

The sensory responses of neurons in the amygdala and mesencephalic reticular formation in the cat were enhanced following the intravenous administration of subconvulsant doses of bicuculline, strychnine, bemegride, pentylenetetrazol and physostigmine. The degree and intensity of the enhancement of the response was considerably greater in the reticular formation than in the amygdala. The latency of the response in simultaneously-recorded pairs of neurons in the amygdala and reticular formation was significantly shorter in the mesencephalic reticular formation. The enhancement induced by convulsants does not appear to be transmitter-specific, since enhancement was produced with sequential administration of convulsant drugs which affect γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), glycine or acetylcholine. These findings suggest that the reticular formation is involved, to a larger degree than the amygdala, in the ability of sensory stimuli to initiate generalized convulsive seizures in animals treated with these convulsant drugs. The enhancement of the response in the hippocampus and cortex, which has previously been shown to exhibit a longer latency and a lower degree of enhancement than the reticular formation, coupled with the findings in the amygdala, suggest that the reticular formation may mediate the enhancement of the response of these other regions of the brain. The spread of the enhancement of the response to other structures in the brain via the widely distributed output pathways from the reticular formation may lead to initiation of generalized seizures by a recruitment-like process, which may involve enlargement of the sensory hyperresponsive neural network of the brain until a critical neural mass is reached and initiation of seizures results.

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