Journal of neurotrauma
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Journal of neurotrauma · Jan 1991
Safety versus efficacy of spinal cord stimulation for the generation of motor-evoked potentials in the rat.
The relative safety and efficacy of direct versus indirect methods of spinal cord stimulation for the production of descending motor-evoked responses was studied in pentobarbital-anesthetized rats (n = 39). Electrical stimuli were delivered for 1 h, either directly to the cord dorsum using silver ball electrodes or indirectly through jeweler's screws implanted in the intact laminae. Compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs) were recorded differentially in the quadriceps and evaluated for their morphology and reproducibility. ⋯ However, CMAP responses were unaltered. Examination of the strength-duration relationship for the production of threshold responses to translaminar constant current stimulation, as well as experiments using selective transection of the dorsal columns, revealed the CMAP responses to be neurally mediated and conducted through the cord independent of the ascending sensory tracts that mediate the rat's somatosensory-evoked response. Data are discussed in terms of the potential experimental usefulness of CAMPs elicited by indirect dorsal spinal stimulation.