Abstract

The effects of dopamine on ventral root potential produced by a single supramaximal dorsal root stimulation of the dorsal root was investigated during experiments on isolated superfused spinal cord segments from 10–16-day old rats. A reciprocal dose-dependent inhibition of the mono- and polysynaptic components of reflex response was also observed. Minimum effective concentration was 1×10−8 M dopamine. Extent of reflex response increased in step with dopamine concentration, so that the amplitude of the monosynaptic component of ventral root potential was decreased by 20% and 87% of baseline level by the action of 10−4 and 10−3 M dopamine respectively on the cord. The amplitude of the polysynaptic component was thereby decreased by an average of 18% and 87%. Findings indicate that dopaminergic brainstem-spinal pathways contribute to the governing of impulse transmission in the segmental reflex arcs. Inhibition of dopaminergic synaptic transmission probably underlies the increase in latency already described in the literature, as well as the increase observed in the threshold of reflex motor response to nociceptive action following either stimulation of the dopaminergic brainstem structures or intravenous administration of dopamine agonists.

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