Abstract

In the isolated frog spinal cord, antidromic stimulation of motor nerves produces intraspinal field potentials with a characteristic spatial distribution. When recording from the ventral horn, there is a short latency (1–2 msec) response corresponding to activity generated by antidromic activation of motoneuron cell bodies and proximal dendrites. In addition, in the dorsal horn, a delayed wave (12–13 msec latency) corresponding in time with the negative dorsal root potential is also recorded. This wave (VR-SFP) is positive at the dorsal surface of the cord and inverts to negativity at more ventral regions. The negative VR-SFP is maximum between 300–500 μm depth from the dorsal surface and decays with increasing depth towards the motor nucleus. Six days after chronic section of the dorsal roots L7 to L9 in one side of the spinal cord, stimulation of the motor nerves on the deafferented side produces only the early response attributable to antidromic activation of motoneurons. No distinctive VR-SFPs are recorded at any depth within the cord. These findings are consistent with the interpretation that afferent fiber terminals are the current generators of the VR-SFP. The presynaptic and postsynaptic focal potentials recorded in the motor nucleus after stimulation of the ventrolateral tract, as well as the corresponding synaptic potentials electrotonically recorded from the ventral roots, are not depressed during conditioning stimulations which produce primary afferent depolarization. This contrasts with the depression of the presynaptic and post-synaptic focal potentials and synaptic potentials produced by stimulation of sensory fibers. It is concluded that, unlike the afferent fiber terminals, the terminals of the ventrolateral tract are not subjected to a presynaptic modulation of the type involving primary afferent depolarization.

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