Abstract
In completely deafferented cats with spinal cord transected and paralyzed with gallamine, the close arterial injection of nicotine (5 to 33 μg) into the spinal cord circulation or the intravenous injection of eserine (2 mg/kg) produced a transient increase in excitability of the central terminals of primary afferent fibers. Continuous d-c records from dorsal roots during nicotine injections indicated that a depolarization of the terminals was probably responsible for the observed excitability increase. Mecamylamine prevented both the depolarization and the increase in excitability of primary afferent central terminals whereas atropine and gallamine did not. The monosynaptic reflex was always depressed following injections of nicotine or eserine, but the excitability of the motorpool was found to be increased by these drugs. It was concluded that the monosynaptic reflex depression following injections of nicotine or eserine had a significant presynaptic inhibitory component as a consequence of a drug-induced depolarization of the central terminals of Group Ia afferent fibers.
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