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Functional organization of long ascending propriospinal pathways linking lumbo-sacral and cervical segments in the cat
Authors:S Miller  D J Reitsma  F G van der Meché
Institution:Department of Anatomy, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Rotterdam The Netherlands
Abstract:In high spinal cats propriospinal pathways ascending from lumbo-sacral levels of the spinal cord can mediate strong excitatory and inhibitory changes in reflexes to different groups of motoneurones supplying muscles of the forelimb. Discharges evoked by electrical stimulation of hindlimb nerves could be evoked in 41% of experiments in the motoneurones of pectoralis major and minor. The latency of the discharge (8–18 msec) could be shortened by increasing the repetition frequency of the stimulus, the greatest reduction occurring in the range 1–4 Hz. Contralateral hindlimb nerves were less effective and the discharge generally occurred at a latency 1–2 msec longer than for ipsilateral nerves.Monosynaptic reflexes to pectoralis major and deep radial motoneurones supplying the physiological flexor muscles were strongly facilitated by hindlimb nerve stimulation, ipsilateral nerves being more effective than contralateral. Monosynaptic reflexes to latissimus dorsi showed a reciprocal pattern of conditioning, being depressed by ipsilateral and facilitated by contralateral hindlimb extensor nerves, the flexor nerves giving the reverse pattern. Monosynaptic reflexes to median and ulnar nerves supplying physiological extensor muscles were not significantly affected by hindlimb nerve conditioning.Polysynaptic reflexes to pectoralis major and deep radial motoneurones received initial strong facilitation followed by prolonged depression, ipsilateral hindlimb nerves being more effective than contralateral. In latissimus dorsi a reciprocal pattern similar to that for monosynaptic reflex testing was found. Polysynaptic reflexes to median and ulnar motoneurones received only prolonged depression.The hindlimb afferent nerves responsible for the discharge in forelimb motoneurones and for the facilitation and depression of forelimb reflexes include groups II and II muscle afferents and group II skin afferents, especially from quadriceps and sartorius muscles, and sural and superficial peroneal nerves, respectively.The ascending long propriospinal pathways are influenced bilaterally from hindlimb nerves and are located in the lower thoracic segments in the ventrolateral funiculus. The pathways mediate effects on ipsilateral and contralateral forelimb reflex systems, the ipsilateral projections being dominant. Part of the long ascending projection terminates monosynaptically on the motoneurones of pectoralis major. It is likely that group II afferents from ipsilateral quadriceps muscle activate the ascending tract monosynaptically and those from contralateral quadriceps disynaptically.The hypothesis is suggested that long propriospinal paths primarily represent intrinsic links between hindlimb and forelimb ‘motor centres’. The pattern of long ascending influences to groups of forelimb motoneurones corresponds closely to the sequences of hindlimb and forelimb stepping observed in normal cats. A functional role in stepping is therefore proposed for long ascending propriospinal pathways.
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