Abstract
The effects of stimulating the midbrain central gray matter (CGM) on neuronal response in the ventroposteromedial (VPM) nucleus produced by stimulating tooth pulp, A-alpha and A-delta fibers of the intraorbital nerve and the caudal nucleus of the spinal trigeminal tract (CN STT) were investigated during experiments on cats under thiopental-chloralose anesthesia. It was found that applying trains of stimuli to the CGM produced excitatory responses in a proportion of the test neurons with latencies of up to 30 msec. Application of conditioning stimulus to the CGM led to suppression of response of efferent stimulation in neurons belonging to “low-threshold,” “convergent,” and “high-threshold” groups. Responses produced in 40% of neurons by stimulating tooth pulp and A-delta fibers of the suborbital nerve, as well as those evoked in 26.4% of thalamic VPM cells by stimulating A-alpha fibers of the suborbital nerve were completely suppressed. The inhibitory effect found when stimulating CGM on response in certain neurons, produced by stimulating both the peripheral nerve and the CN STT, would indicate that the CGM could exert an influence on the activity of thalamic VPM neurons directly.
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