Abstract
There have been relatively few electrophysiological studies, in any species, describing the supraspinal processing of inputs from the male genital tract. The thalamus was the focus of the present study. In 11 urethan-anesthetized male rats, subregions of the thalamus were surveyed for neuronal responses to the search stimulus, bilateral electrical stimulation of the dorsal nerve of the penis (DNP). A total of 133 DNP-responsive neurons were found and further tested for degree of somatovisceral convergence from other peripheral structures. Histological reconstruction of the recording sites revealed that the penile-responsive neurons were distributed among various thalamic subregions. These thalamic subregions included the medial-dorsal nuclei and ventral and lateral thalamic subregions (majority of neurons responsive to both tactile and pinch stimulation of the penis) as well as intralaminar, posterior and reticular subregions (majority responsive to pinch only). Taken together, the data demonstrate the existence of thalamic neurons with inputs from the male genitalia with widespread somatovisceral convergence. These neurons likely contribute to the neural circuitries underlying various aspects of penile sensation associated with reproductive and nociceptive events.
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