Autonomic neuroscience : basic & clinical
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Some evidence shows that the upper cervical spinal cord might play an important role in propriospinal processing as a sensory filter and modulator for visceral afferents. The aims of this study were to determine (1). the responses of C(1)-C(2) spinal neurons to gastric distension and (2). the relative contribution of vagal and spinal visceral afferent pathways for transmission of gastric input to the upper cervical spinal cord. Extracellular potentials of single C(1)-C(2) spinal neurons were recorded in pentobarbital anesthetized male rats. ⋯ Bilateral cervical vagotomy abolished responses of 4/8 neurons tested. Spinal transection at C(6)-C(7) abolished responses of the other four neurons that still responded to gastric distension after bilateral vagotomy. Results of these data supported the concept that a group of C(1)-C(2) spinal neurons might play a role in processing sensory information from the stomach that travels in vagal and spinal visceral afferent fibers.
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This study was performed to investigate the respective role of sensory afferent and sympathetic fibers in peripheral vasodilatation induced by spinal cord stimulation at different hindpaw skin temperatures. Cooling the skin was used as a strategy to enhance sympathetic activity [Am. J. ⋯ These results suggest that spinal cord stimulation-induced vasodilatation in the cooled hindpaw (<25 degrees C) is mediated via both the sensory afferent (early phase of vasodilatation) and via suppression of the sympathetic efferent activity (late phase) although the threshold for vasodilatation via the sympathetic efferent fibers is higher than that via sensory nerves. In contrast, vasodilatation via sensory afferent fibers may predominate with moderate temperatures (25-28 degrees C). Thus, two complementary mechanisms for spinal cord stimulation-induced vasodilatation may exist depending on the basal sympathetic tone.