Abstract

The effects of severing the spinal trigeminal tract and its caudal nucleus on high-threshold jaw-opening reflex elicited by tooth pulp stimulation were investigated during experiments on cats under chloralose-Nembutal anesthesia. Low-threshold jaw-opening reflex produced by stimulating the A-α-infraorbital nerve at an intensity 2–3 thresholds in relation to the most excitable fibers on this nerve was also observed, as well as suppression of these reflexes induced by central gray matter stimulation. It was found that spinal trigeminal tract section produces a 8–52% increase in high-threshold reflex. The amplitude of low-threshold reflex either remained unchanged or showed a slight tendency to rise or fall. Brief stimulation of the central gray matter produced a 100% decrease in high-threshold reflex in intact animals compared with a 40–60% decrease after section of the trigeminal tract. Protracted stimulation of the central gray brought about an 80% decline in high-threshold reflex in intact animals as against 25–30% after section. The degree to which brief stimulation of the central gray produced depression of low-threshold stimulation remained unchanged by trigeminal tract section. Protracted stimulation of the central gray matter brought about a 25–50% reduction in low-threshold reflex in intact animals and a reduction of 75% in three animals and 15–20% in four animals. This implied that the caudal nucleus of the spinal trigeminal tract exerts a more substantial influence on the process of high- than low-threshold reflex inhibition when the central gray matter is stimulated.

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