Abstract

The effect of alcohol was studied in alert monkeys on the cellular mechanisms of the posterior parietal association cortex, a region that normally participates in visuo-spatial co-ordination of hand movements. In thirty-two experiments, the effects of intracardiac administration of ethanol were monitored by the intracortical multiple-unit recording technique. Alcohol produced rhythmic groupings of the spontaneous impulse activity; the rhythm was accentuated by closing the eyes. The dominant frequency of this rhythm (3.5 to 1 Hz) correlated inversely with the blood alcohol level. Three groups of response types were studied in Brodmann's area 7. At 8 of 12 recording sites, a close correlation was observed between the monkey's reaching accuracy and the magnitude of integrate multineuronal responses to reaching with the contralateral arm under visual guidance, or to grasping an object. Half of the 10 recording sites which were activated by complex visual stimulation also showed a close correlation with the behavioural action of alcohol. Least sensitive to alcohol were somatosensory responses; only 3 of 10 of such recording sites were influenced by moderate doses of alcohol. Larger doses producing coma increased the proportion of responses blocked by alcohol, whereas no effects were observed in the adjacent primary somatosensory cortex. Our results show that the posterior parietal association cortex is very sensitive to the action of alcohol. Moreover, these findings support the theory that the action of alcohol in various parts of the central nervous system depends on the complexity of synaptic contacts to the location under study.

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