• Acta Physiol. Scand. · Nov 2004

    Partial reversal of conduction slowing during repetitive stimulation of single sympathetic efferents in human skin.

    • M Campero, J Serra, H Bostock, and J L Ochoa.
    • Good Samaritan Hospital & Medical Center and Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, OR, USA.
    • Acta Physiol. Scand. 2004 Nov 1;182(3):305-11.

    AimsTo describe and identify the function of a class of human C fibre with an unusual response to repetitive electrical stimulation. Other C fibres slow progressively at 2 Hz (type 1), reach a latency plateau (type 2) or hardly slow at all (type 3).MethodsC fibres innervating hairy skin were recorded by microneurography in the superficial peroneal nerves of 19 healthy volunteers. Baseline electrical stimulation of the skin was at 0.25 Hz, and activity-dependent slowing recorded during stimulation at 2 Hz for 3 min and after a 3-min pause in stimulation.ResultsIn 41 units, there was a partial recovery of latency during repetitive stimulation. These were classified as 'type-4' units, and identified as sympathetic efferents, since they exhibited spontaneously activity, which was enhanced by manoeuvres that increase sympathetic outflow (15 of 16 cases) and/or suppressed by a proximal anaesthetic block (eight of eight cases). The peak slowing during 2 Hz trains averaged 6.47 +/- 2.06% (mean +/- SD, n=41), but after 3 min the slowing had reduced to 4.90 +/- 2.20%, which was less than in all type 1 (nociceptor) fibres but similar to that in type 2 (cold) fibres. Compared with cold fibres, type-4 sympathetic fibres slowed more after the first 10 impulses at 2 Hz (2.57 +/- 0.45%) and also after a pause in stimulation (1.66 +/- 0.51%).ConclusionsThe distinctive activity-dependent slowing profiles of these type-4 sympathetic C units may help identification in vitro, and suggest that hyperpolarization-activated channels have a particularly prominent role in the axonal membrane.

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