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  • Title: Responses of spinal cord neurons following stimulation of A beta femoral-saphenous venous afferent fibers.
    Author: Yates BJ, Thompson FJ, Mickle JP.
    Journal: Brain Res; 1988 Jun 07; 451(1-2):285-94. PubMed ID: 3251588.
    Abstract:
    A population of large (A beta) afferents is known to have endings in the wall of the femoral-saphenous vein. These afferents project to the lower lumbar spinal cord. The purpose of the present study was to identify, localize, and characterize spinal neurons that receive inputs from such afferents. Responses of 50 neurons in the L6 spinal cord segment of decerebrate-spinal cats or intact cats anesthetized using alpha-chloralose were recorded following electrical stimulation of these afferents. Observations were also made on the convergence of muscle and cutaneous afferent inputs onto neurons driven by stimulation of afferents terminating in the femoral-saphenous vein. All recording sites were marked either by intracellularly staining the element characterized with HRP or by extracellularly iontophoresing a small quantity of this tracer. The cells were driven for long durations (mean of 51.5 ms, S.E.M. of 10.0) by single-shock stimulation of femoral-saphenous venous afferents. The recording sites were located in Rexed's laminae IV-VIII and X. Eight of the 50 neurons were activated by venous afferent stimulation at latencies equal to or shorter than that of the first negative wave of the cord dorsum potential; these units were driven at a mean latency of 1.4 ms (S.E.M. of 0.25) following the arrival of the afferent volley at the cord and were assumed to receive monosynaptic, or at least relatively direct, inputs from the primary afferents. Most of these cells (6 of 8) were located in lamina V. The majority of the neurons studied (37 of 50) were activated at latencies longer than 3 ms following the arrival of the afferent volley at the cord; about half (19 of 37) of those activated at longer latencies were located in lamina VII, and the rest were scattered among the other laminae. Twenty-eight of 40 venous afferent-driven cells tested could also be activated by electrical stimulation of either the posterior tibial or sural nerve. In general, the stimulation intensities necessary to activate the neurons were only sufficient to excite large (A alpha or A beta) muscle and cutaneous afferents. Neurons receiving the shortest latency inputs from the femoral-saphenous vein were less likely to receive convergent inputs from muscle or skin than were neurons activated by venous afferents at longer latency.
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