• Pain · Oct 1985

    Tonic descending inhibition affects intensity coding of nociceptive responses of spinal dorsal horn neurones in the cat.

    • H Dickhaus, G Pauser, and M Zimmermann.
    • Pain. 1985 Oct 1;23(2):145-58.

    AbstractThe supraspinal inhibitory control of lumbar spinal dorsal horn neurones was investigated in N2O-anaesthetized cats by reversibly blocking conduction in the spinal cord. Dorsal horn neurones selected for this study had convergent input from myelinated (A-) and unmyelinated (C-) fibres in the posterior tibial and/or superficial peroneal nerves of the hind limb. Virtually all of them could also be excited by noxious heating of the skin of the footpad region and by low intensity mechanical stimulation of the foot. Variation of the temperature of noxious radiant skin heating (40-56 degrees C, 10 sec in duration) resulted in graded responses of the neurones. The stimulus-response functions (SRF) were monotonic; in the majority of 32 cases they were linear. Neurones could be classified according to their maximum discharge frequency in response to skin heating into 22 weakly sensitive units (responses below 100 Hz at 50 degrees C) and 10 highly sensitive units (above 100 Hz). Responses outlasted the period of skin heating by seconds to minutes. A reversible conduction block of spinal axons by cooling a 15 mm cord segment (L1) with a thermode at 0 degrees C affected the responsiveness of the dorsal horn neurones in 12 of 15 cases. The maximum discharge frequency to a certain temperature of skin heating was increased during the spinal block. The duration of heat-evoked discharges was either not changed or increased during the spinal block. The SRF were reversibly displaced during the spinal blockade to higher discharge frequencies and lower threshold temperatures of skin heating. In 8 of 12 cases the change in the SRF was a nearly parallel shift, whereas in 4 units the increase of responsiveness had a complex effect upon the SRF. The decrease in the threshold to skin heating ranged up to 4.5 degrees C; the mean decrease was 2 degrees C. It is confirmed that in anaesthetized cats, nociceptive spinal neurones are subject to a tonically active descending inhibition, which is interrupted by local spinal cooling. The effect of the spinal block on the SRF of the neurones suggests that this tonic inhibition is similar to that produced by electrical stimulation in the lateral reticular formation of the brain-stem.

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