Abstract

The respective effects of pentobarbital-sodium, enibumal-sodium, urethane, urethane-chloralose and lidocaine on the function of the acoustic middle ear reflex in the rabbit were studied. The response of the middle ear muscles was measured by recording changes in both ears' acoustic impedance when the reflex was elicited by applying pure tone stimuli (2,000 Hz) to the two ears one at a time. In that way both the crossed and the uncrossed reflexes were studied. All the drugs were found to depress the reflex in such a way that a higher sound intensity was required after administration to achieve the same impedance change as before. The effect of the anesthetics was roughly proportional to their known anesthetic power. Lidocaine produced only a slight depression of the reflex. The crossed reflex showed a greater susceptibility to the general anesthetics than did the uncrossed reflex which suggests a greater complexity of the crossed reflex. Because the method of recording the reflex response does not require any surgery and is equally well applicable in unrestrained rabbits and in humans, it is suggested as a way of testing the effect of drugs on the central nervous system.

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