Wind-up of tooth pulp-evoked responses and its suppression in rat trigeminal caudal neurons |
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Authors: | Michiko Hamba Hisashi Hisamitsu Masuo Muro |
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Affiliation: | Department of Physiology, School of Dentistry, Showa University, Tokyo, Japan. |
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Abstract: | Induction and suppression of wind-up were studied in 97 tooth pulp-driven neurons in the trigeminal subnucleus caudalis, using Wistar albino rats anesthetized with urethane and alpha-chloralose. Tooth pulp stimulation applied to an ipsilateral lower incisor evoked early discharges, indicating excitatory inputs from A-delta fibers and subsequent late discharges from C-fiber volleys in caudal neurons. Wind-up was efficiently evoked by stimulation delivered at 0.3-1 Hz, with current intensity sufficient to evoke late discharges. Conditioning stimulation of the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus (ARH) suppressed late discharges, including wind-up, without affecting the A-fiber response. Focal cooling of the periaqueductal gray (PAG) abolished the suppression by the ARH and further enhanced the wind-up of the caudal neurons. These results suggest: 1) Temporal summation of depolarization evoked by C-fiber volleys builds wind-up in caudal neurons; 2) ARH stimulation suppresses late discharges by blocking synaptic transmission from C-fiber inputs, and this interrupts prolonged facilitation of the neurons; 3) the ARH is involved in induction of inhibitory controls descending from the PAG to the trigeminal caudalis. |
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Keywords: | Wind-up Trigeminal subnucleus caudalis Tooth pulp stimulation Arcuate nucleus of hypothalamus Descending inhibitory system |
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