Abstract

Electrical stimulation of the sural, superficial peroneal and plantar nerves in anesthetized cats produces a sequence of potentials in the spinal cord lumbosacral enlargement. The distributions of the spinal cord dorsum negative intermediary potential (N1 wave) and of the associated field potential recorded in depth from the spinal gray matter were mapped. The N1 wave produced by the sural nerve was largest at the junction of the S1 and L7 segments, whereas that evoked by the other two nerves was maximum in L6 and L7. The field potentials recorded in depth also showed a differential distribution. The maximum negativity during phase 2, corresponding to the N1 cord dorsum potential, was found to lie laterally in the dorsal horn when the sural nerve was stimulated, but medially when the plantar nerve was activated. The superficial peroneal nerve produced its largest negative field potential in the central region of the dorsal horn. The negative field potentials from the sural and superficial peroneal nerves were not as well separated spatially from each other as they were from the potential evoked by the plantar nerve.

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