Abstract

Horseradish peroxidase was injected into the cervical vagus nerve or stomach wall of adult squirrel monkeys. Following cervical vagus nerve injections, labelled afferent fibres were present in the tractus solitarius and labelled fibres and terminals were present in medial and lateral parts of the nucleus of the tractus solitarius (NTS) ipsilaterally. Afferent labelling was also seen in the ipsilateral commissural nucleus and in the area postrema. Labelling was present contralaterally in caudal levels of the medial parts of the NTS, in the commissural nucleus, and in the area postrema. Afferent projections to the ipsilateral pars interpolaris of the spinal trigeminal nucleus and to the substantia gelatinosa of the C1 segment of the spinal cord were also labelled. Following injections of HRP into the anterior and posterior stomach walls, the tractus solitarius was labelled bilaterally. Afferent labelling was concentrated bilaterally in the dorsal parts of the medial division of the NTS, i.e., in the subnucleus gelatinosus, and in the commissural nucleus. The regions of NTS immediately adjacent to the tractus solitarius were largely unlabelled. Injections of HRP into the cervical vagus nerve resulted in heavy retrograde labelling of neurons in the ipsilateral dorsal nucleus of the vagus (DMX) and in the nucleus ambiguus (NA). In addition a few neurones were labelled in the intermediate zone between these two nuclei. Retrogradely labelled neurons were also present in the nucleus dorsomedialis in the rostral cervical spinal cord and in the spinal nucleus of the accessory nerve. Injections of HRP into the left cricothyroid muscle in two cases resulted in heavy retrograde labelling of large neurons in the left NA. Following stomach wall injections of HRP retrograde labelling of neurons was seen throughout the rostrocaudal and mediolateral extent of the DMX; there was no apparent topographical organization of the projection. In these cases, a group of labelled smaller neurons was found lying ventrolateral to the main part of the NA through its rostral levels. This study in a primate indicates that a large vagal afferent projection originates in the stomach wall and terminates primarily in the subnucleus gelatinosus of the NTS and in the commissural nucleus with a distribution similar to that described previously in studies in several subprimate mammalian species. The present results and those of other studies suggest some degree of segregation of visceral input within different subnuclei of the NTS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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