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  • Title: Neural and anatomic characteristics of peripheral afferent fibers in the milk ejection reflex.
    Author: Haller EW.
    Journal: Brain Res Bull; 1985 Dec; 15(6):563-7. PubMed ID: 3841293.
    Abstract:
    Conduction velocities were measured and certain morphologic characteristics were examined of the abdominal mammary nerve in two- to ten-day postpartum rats. This nerve enters the spinal cord at the spinal segmental level T-12. Overall conduction velocity was (Mean +/- S.D.) 18.9 +/- 2.25 m/sec with a major peak at 9.7 +/- 0.72 m/sec. The distribution of conduction velocities in the nerve was similar to that of a typical spinal nerve. Nerve fiber diameters measured between about 1 and 25 microns with peaks at 4.9, 10.5, and 18.9 microns. Injection into the peripheral nerve of fluorescent dye, Lucifer yellow CH (LY), or wheat germ agglutinin-coupled horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) after ventral root rhizotomy permitted study of the distribution of primary afferents in the spinal cord. The terminal field of these fibers centered around the dorsal cap of Clarke's column and the lateral spinal nucleus, bilaterally. The distribution of WGA-HRP was more restricted than that of LY. A large number of LY-staining fibers were also found ipsilaterally in the medial portion of the intermediomedial column. A smaller amount of LY-staining was present contralaterally in the area of the spinothalamic tract. It is concluded that afferent impulses resulting from mammary stimulation in the milk ejection reflex are probably carried in a mixed spinal nerve whose primary afferent field lies mainly in ipsilateral spinal structures, although there is some evidence for crossing fibers. The data suggest that considerable opportunity exists for interaction with major sensory afferent fiber systems as well as with autonomic fibers. Hence, the spinal path of afferent information relevant for the milk ejection reflex may well be diffuse and it may involve several sensory modalities.
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