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1.
Researchers studied the convergence of the vertical posterior semicircular canal (PC), saccular nerves (SAC), utricular nerves (UT), and horizontal semicircular canal nerves (HC) on single vestibular neurons. The vestibular neurons were categorized by their innervating targets. Vestibular neurons were classified as vestibulospinal proper neurons (VS), vestibulo-ocular proper neurons (VO), vestibulo-oculo-spinal neurons sending axon collaterals to the extraocular motoneuron pools and spinal cord (VOS), and vestibular nucleus neurons without axons to the oculomotor nuclei or the spinal cord (V). Results indicate that the percentage of convergence of VS neurons was higher that that of neurons sending axons to the oculomotor nuclei (VO and VOS). They conclude that the convergence of canal and otolith inputs likely contributes mainly to vestibulospinal reflexes by sending inputs to the neck and other muscles during head inclination, which creates the combined stimuli of angular and linear acceleration.  相似文献   

2.
A striking feature of vestibular hair cells is the polarized arrangement of their stereocilia as the basis for their directional sensitivity. In mammals, each of the vestibular end organs is characterized by a distinct distribution of these polarized cells. We utilized the technique of post-fixation transganglionic neuronal tracing with fluorescent lipid soluble dyes in embryonic and postnatal mice to investigate whether these polarity characteristics correlate with the pattern of connections between the endorgans and their central targets; the vestibular nuclei and cerebellum. We found that the cerebellar and brainstem projections develop independently from each other and have a non-overlapping distribution of neurons and afferents from E11.5 on. In addition, we show that the vestibular fibers projecting to the cerebellum originate preferentially from the lateral half of the utricular macula and the medial half of the saccular macula. In contrast, the brainstem vestibular afferents originate primarily from the medial half of the utricular macula and the lateral half of the saccular macula. This indicates that the line of hair cell polarity reversal within the striola region segregates almost mutually exclusive central projections. A possible interpretation of this feature is that this macular organization provides an inhibitory side-loop through the cerebellum to produce synergistic tuning effects in the vestibular nuclei. The canal cristae project to the brainstem vestibular nuclei and cerebellum, but the projection to the vestibulocerebellum originates preferentially from the superior half of each of the cristae. The reason for this pattern is not clear, but it may compensate for unequal activation of crista hair cells or may be an evolutionary atavism reflecting a different polarity organization in ancestral vertebrate ears.  相似文献   

3.
Galvanic vestibular stimulation (GVS) is a simple, safe, and specific way to elicit vestibular reflexes. Yet, despite a long history, it has only recently found popularity as a research tool and is rarely used clinically. The obstacle to advancing and exploiting GVS is that we cannot interpret the evoked responses with certainty because we do not understand how the stimulus acts as an input to the system. This paper examines the electrophysiology and anatomy of the vestibular organs and the effects of GVS on human balance control and develops a model that explains the observed balance responses. These responses are large and highly organized over all body segments and adapt to postural and balance requirements. To achieve this, neurons in the vestibular nuclei receive convergent signals from all vestibular receptors and somatosensory and cortical inputs. GVS sway responses are affected by other sources of information about balance but can appear as the sum of otolithic and semicircular canal responses. Electrophysiological studies showing similar activation of primary afferents from the otolith organs and canals and their convergence in the vestibular nuclei support this. On the basis of the morphology of the cristae and the alignment of the semicircular canals in the skull, rotational vectors calculated for every mode of GVS agree with the observed sway. However, vector summation of signals from all utricular afferents does not explain the observed sway. Thus we propose the hypothesis that the otolithic component of the balance response originates from only the pars medialis of the utricular macula.  相似文献   

4.
In experiments on the preparation of a frog perfused brain, using recording of intracellular potentials the vestibulospinal neurons were identified on the basis of excitatory postsynaptic potentials evoked by the stimulation of the ipsilateral vestibular nerve and antidromic activation from the stimulation of the cervical and lumbar enlargements of the spinal cord. The average conduction velocity determined for axons of C neurons was 10.67 m/s and for L neurons 15.84 m/s. The ratio of C and L neurons over the vestibular nuclear complex was very stimular to each other: 52% C neurons and 48% L neurons. The majority of both types of neurons were localized in the lateral vestibular nucleus (58.6%), to the lesser extent in the descending vestibular nucleus (30.7%) and very little in the medial vestibular nucleus (10.6%). Fast and slow cells were detected among the vestibulospinal neurons. The fast neurons of L cells did not prevail greatly over the slow ones, whereas the slow neurons of C cells prevailed comparatively largely over the fast neurons. Thus, it became possible to reconstruct spatial distribution of the identified vestibulospinal neurons. The results of spatial distribution of C and L vestibulospinal neurons in the frogs failed to conform to definite somatotopy, which is characteristic for mammalian vestibular nuclei. C and L neurons in the frog's vestibular nuclei as a source of vestibulospinal fibres, are scattered separately or more frequently in groups, so that they establish a "patch-like" somatotopy and do not form a distinctly designed fields as in mammals.  相似文献   

5.
In the thew frog Rana ridibunda, local microphoretic injections of horseradish peroxidase into various parts of spinal cord were used for study of trajectory of retrograde enzyme-labeled fiber systems and topography of labeled neurons in vestibulospinal nuclei, the source of vestibulospinal fibers. The vestibulospinal tracts were shown to be formed by neurons of lateral vestibular nucleus, although descending vestibular nucleus also is partially involved, while medial vestibular nucleus contributes to even lesser degree. Besides, study of spatial distribution of C- and L-vestibulospinal neurons in the frog did not confirm the presence of the definite somatotopy that is characteristic of vestibular nuclei in mammals.  相似文献   

6.
Quantitative characteristics of spatial organization of neuron populations of vestibular nuclei, forming projections into the spinal cord, were obtained in experiments on guinea pigs by the retrograde axonal transport of horseradish peroxidase, injected unilaterally into the upper cervical and lower thoracic segments of the spinal cord, method. Neurons accumulating the enzyme were found ipsilaterally in the lateral vestibular nucleus and bilaterally in the descending and medial vestibular nuclei. The distribution of vestibulospinal neurons along the length of the spinal cord was studied. Neuron populations of the medial and descending vestibular nuclei whose projection regions coincide with those of fibers of the corticospinal and rubrospinal systems were discovered. The role of vestibulospinal systems in the structure of supra-segmental control of the neuronal apparatus of the spinal cord is discussed.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 23, No. 3, pp. 353–362, May–June, 1991.  相似文献   

7.
In experiments on a perfused brain preparation of the frog Rana ridibunda, the vestibulospinal neurons were identified, based on the excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSP) that appeared in response to an ipsilateral stimulation of the vestibular nerve and on the antidromic activity in response to stimulation of the cervical and lumbar enlargements of the spinal cord. The cells that could be antidromically activated only by stimulation of the cervical cord were designated as C-neurons. The cells that could be antidromically activated by stimulation of the lumbar cord were designated as L-neurons. The intracellular activity was recorded in 244 neurons of the vestibular nuclear complexes, out of which 127 cells (52%) were C-neurons and 117 (48%), L-neurons. The antidromic action potentials were recorded from the cells of lateral (143 neurons, 58.6%), descending (75 neurons, 30.7%), and medial (26 neurons, 10.6%) vestibular nuclei. The axon conduction velocity was determined to amount, on average, to 10.67 m/s for C-neurons and 15.84 m/s for L-neurons. In the vestibular nuclear complex, distribution of the fast and slow C- and L-neurons was studied. This study confirmed the previously made suggestion that C- and L-neurons of the frog, as sources of vestibular fibers, are distributed separately or, more often, as small groups, which leads to a patch-like somatotopy, rather than to formation of clearly separated fields.  相似文献   

8.
Vestibular mechanisms involved in idiopathic scoliosis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Patients affected by idiopathic scoliosis (IS) show not only a spinal deformity, but also postural and oculomotor deficits suggesting that such syndrome can be related to a vestibular disfunction. It appears, however, that, in children, a slight unbalance in the activity of vestibular complex of both sides escapes the neuronal mechanisms responsible for vestibular compensation and leads to the spinal curvature which characterises IS. Such process could be reinforced by a disrupted integration of vestibular and visual signals at cortical level, leading to an altered perception of the vertical and to abnormal motor commands. In addition to the classical ascending and descending pathways arising from the vestibular nuclei, which utilize glutamate or GABA as neurotransmitters, labyrinthine afferents may also affect spinal, cerebellar and cerebrocortical structures, through the noradrenergic and serotoninergic systems, which originate from the locus coeruleus and the raphe nuclei, respectively. Due to the role of these neuromodulators in brain plasticity, a disruption in the activity of monoaminergic neurons could favour the development of postural and oculomotor deficits. An impaired release of monoamine at cerebrocortical level could also explain the cognitive deficits which may occur in IS patients.  相似文献   

9.
The activity of LVN neurons was recorded in decerebrate cats and analyzed during separate stimulation of macular vestibular and neck receptors elicited by sinusoidal rotation about the longitudinal axis at 0.026 Hz, 10 degrees peak amplitude. Of 119 LVN units examined, the great majority, i.e. 106, were vestibulospinal neurons antidromically identified following stimulation of the spinal cord at T12-L1, thus projecting to the lumbosacral segments of the spinal cord (IVS neurons); the remaining 13 units were nonantidromically activated. Among the 119 LVN neurons, 77 (64.7%) responded with a periodic modulation of their firing rate to roll tilt of the animal and 81 (68.1%) responded to neck rotation. Convergence of macular and neck inputs was found in 58/119 (48.7%) lateral vestibular neurons; in these units, the gain as well as the sensitivity of the first harmonic of responses corresponded on the average to 0.58 +/- 0.45, S.D. imp./sec/deg and 4.39 +/- 3.58, S.D.%/deg for the neck responses and 0.52 +/- 0.49, S.D. imp./sec/deg and 3.85 +/- 3.35, S.D.%/deg for the macular responses, respectively. In addition to these convergent units, 19/119 (16.0%) and 23/119 (19.3%) lateral vestibular units responded to selective stimulation either of macular receptors or of neck receptors only. These units, which showed on the average an higher firing rate and a lower conduction velocity of the corresponding vestibulospinal axons than the convergent units, displayed a significantly lower response gain and sensitivity to animal tilt and neck rotation with respect to those obtained from convergent units. Most of the convergent lateral vestibular units were maximally excited by the direction of stimulus orientation, the first harmonic of responses showing an average phase lead of +51.4 degrees with respect to neck position and +21.9 degrees with respect to animal position. Two populations of convergent neurons were observed. The first group of units (53/58, i.e. 91.4%) showed reciprocal ("out-of-phase") responses to the two inputs in that they were mainly excited during side-down animal tilt and side-up neck rotation. The remaining group of units (5/58, i.e. 8.6%) showed parallel ("in phase") responses to the two inputs and they were mainly excited by side-up neck rotation and animal tilt. Interestingly, the former group of units displayed an average gain and sensitivity to the labyrinth and neck inputs which were more than twice higher than the values obtained from the latter group of units.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
A comparison was made between dimensions of vestibular neurons labeled with horseradish peroxidase projecting to the spinal cord and cells stained with neutral red not differentiated into vestibulospinal and not forming descending projections. The cells in nondifferentiated areas of descending, medial and lateral vestibular nuclei include neurons of all sizes. In the caudorostral direction of the vestibular complex, the number of small and average neurons decreased and the number of large and gigantic neurons increased. The vestibulospinal populations included cells of average, large and gigantic size, and large and gigantic neurons were dominant. In the caudorostral direction, neurons of various sizes were distributed relatively evenly without forming differentiated groups.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 23, No. 5, pp. 616–624, September–October, 1991.  相似文献   

11.
Our previous studies (Boscan P, Kasparov S, and Paton JF. Eur J Neurosci 16: 907-920, 2002) showed that activation of somatic afferents attenuated the baroreceptor reflex via neurokinin type 1 (NK(1)) and GABA(A) receptors within the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS). The periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) can also depress baroreceptor reflex function and project to the NTS. In the present study, we have tested the possibility that the dorsolateral (dl)-PAG projects to the NTS neurons that also respond to somatic afferent input. In an in situ, arterially perfused, unanesthetized decerebrate rat preparation, somatic afferents (brachial plexus), cervical spinal cord, and dl-PAG were stimulated electrically, whereas NTS neurons were recorded extracellularly. From 45 NTS neurons excited by either brachial plexus or dl-PAG stimulation, 41 received convergence excitatory inputs from both afferents. Onset latency and evoked peak discharge frequency from brachial plexus afferents were 39.4 +/- 4.7 ms and 10.7 +/- 1.1 Hz, whereas this was 43.9 +/- 6.4 ms and 7.9 +/- 1 Hz, respectively, following dl-PAG stimulation. As revealed by using a paired pulse stimulation protocol, monosynaptic connections were found in 9 of 36 neurons tested from both spinal cord and dl-PAG. We tested NK(1)-receptor sensitivity in 38 neurons that received convergent inputs from brachial plexus/PAG. Fifteen neurons were sensitive to selective antagonism of NK(1) receptors. CP-99994, the NK(1) antagonist, failed to alter ongoing firing activity but reduced the evoked peak discharge frequency following stimulation of both brachial plexus (from 12.3 +/- 1.8 to 7.2 +/- 1.3 Hz; P < 0.01) and PAG (from 7.8 +/- 1.5 to 4.5 +/- 1 Hz; P < 0.01). We conclude that 1) somatic brachial and PAG afferents can converge onto single NTS neurons; 2) this convergence occurs via either direct or indirect pathways; and 3) NK(1) receptors are activated by some of these inputs.  相似文献   

12.
The auditory-vestibular ganglion (AVG) is formed by the division of otic placode-derived neuroblasts, which then differentiate into auditory and vestibular afferent neurons. The developmental mechanisms that regulate neuronal cell fate determination, axonal pathfinding and innervation of otic neurons are poorly understood. The present study characterized the expression of myosin VIIA, along with the neuronal markers, Islet1, NeuroD1 and TuJ1, in the developing avian ear, during Hamburger–Hamilton (HH) stages 16–40. At early stages, when neuroblasts are delaminating from the otic epithelium, myosin VIIA expression was not observed. Myosin VIIA was initially detected in a subset of neurons during the early phase of neuronal differentiation (HH stage 20). As the AVG segregates into the auditory and vestibular portions, myosin VIIA was restricted to a subset of vestibular neurons, but was not present in auditory neurons. Myosin VIIA expression in the vestibular ganglion was maintained through HH stage 33 and was downregulated by stage 36. Myosin VIIA was also observed in the migrating processes of vestibular afferents as they begin to innervate the otic epithelium HH stage 22/23. Notably, afferents targeting hair cells of the cristae were positive for myosin VIIA while afferents targeting the utricular and saccular maculae were negative (HH stage 26–28). Although previous studies have reported that myosin VIIA is restricted to sensory hair cells, our data shows that myosin VIIA is also expressed in neurons of the developing chick ear. Our study suggests a possible role for myosin VIIA in axonal migration/pathfinding and/or innervation of vestibular afferents. In addition, myosin VIIA could be used as an early marker for vestibular neurons during the development of the avian AVG.  相似文献   

13.
Single unit responses in nuclei of the vestibular complex to stimulation of the labyrinths and of proprioceptive and autonomic afferents were investigated. Different types of unit responses were obtained to stimulation, including evoked activity consisting of a group of action potentials followed by inhibition of the spike discharge. Unit activity in the vestibular nuclei was shown to depend on extralabyrinthine stimulation. In response to adequate stimulation of the labyrinths by tilting the head, the role of receptors of muscles and joints in the neck was distinguished. The question of the somatotopic organization of the vestibular nuclei and convergence of various afferent flows on neurons giving rise to the vestibulospinal tract is discussed.Institute of Medico-Biological Problems, Ministry of Health of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 8, No. 5, pp. 507–513, September–October, 1976.  相似文献   

14.
The origin of the vestibulospinal projection in the toad has been investigated by using the method of the retrograde axonal transport of HRP injected at various levels of the spinal cord. The vestibulospinal projection, in this species, was found to be somatotopically organized, since neurons projecting to the cervical segments of the spinal cord were located within the rostromedial part of the ventral vestibular nucleus and those neurons projecting to the lumbosacral segments of the spinal cord were located within the caudolateral part of that nucleus. This pattern of organization of the vestibulospinal projection in amphibia is similar to that described in mammals and birds.  相似文献   

15.
Motion sickness and otolith asymmetry.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
There is a highly scattered inter-individual susceptibility in man to motion sickness. It is discussed whether different masses of otoconias between right and left sides are responsible for a high susceptibility. In order to proof this theory, we measured the otoliths of fish (salmons, trouts, Xiphophorus Helleri; Sumatra barbes) and found big differences in the utricular stones up to 140%. The mass differences of the saccular stones were much smaller. In fish, showing abnormal swimming behavior during off-vertical axis rotation we found big mass differences compared to that of normal swimmers. This difference was only seen in the utricular and not in the saccular stones. We therefore assume, that a big mass difference is one of the factors to trigger motion sickness especially for the high susceptibility to it. The macula utriculi seem to be much more integrated in the vestibular sense than the macula sacculi.  相似文献   

16.
It has been recently demonstrated that some primary otolith afferents and most otolith-related vestibular nuclei neurons encode two spatial dimensions that can be described by two vectors in temporal and spatial quadrature. These cells are called broadly-tuned neurons. They are characterized by a non-zero tuning ratio which is defined as the ratio of the minimum over the maximum sensitivity of the neuron. Broadly-tuned neurons exhibit response gains that do not vary according to the cosine of the angle between the stimulus direction and the cell's maximum sensitivity vector and response phase values that depend on stimulus orientation. These responses were observed during stimulation with pure linear acceleration and can be explained by spatio-temporal convergence (STC) of primary otolith afferents and/or otolith hair cells. Simulations of STC of the inputs to primary otolith afferents and vestibular nuclei neurons have revealed interesting characteristics: First, in the case of two narrowly-tuned input signals, the largest tuning ratio is achieved when the input signals are of equal gain. The smaller the phase difference between the input vectors, the larger the orientation differences that are required to produce a certain tuning ratio. Orientation and temporal phase differences of 30–40° create tuning ratios of approximately 0.10–0.15 in target neurons. Second, in the case of multiple input signals, the larger the number of converging inputs, the smaller the tuning ratio of the target neuron. The tuning ratio depends on the number of input units, as long as there are not more than about 10. For more than 10–20 input vectors, the tuning ratio becomes almost independent of the number of inputs. Further, if the inputs comprise two populations (with different gain and phase values at a given stimulus frequency), the largest tuning ratio is obtained when the larger population has a smaller gain. These findings are discussed in the context of known anatomical and physiological characteristics of innervation patterns of primary otolith afferents and their possible convergence onto vestibular nuclei neurons.  相似文献   

17.
To assess the organization and functional development of vestibulospinal inputs to cervical motoneurons (MNs), we have used electrophysiology (ventral root and electromyographic [EMG] recording), calcium imaging, trans‐synaptic rabies virus (RV) and conventional retrograde tracing and immunohistochemistry in the neonatal mouse. By stimulating the VIIIth nerve electrically while recording synaptically mediated calcium responses in MNs, we characterized the inputs from the three vestibulospinal tracts, the separate ipsilateral and contralateral medial vestibulospinal tracts (iMVST/cMVST) and the lateral vestibulospinal tract (LVST), to MNs in the medial and lateral motor columns (MMC and LMC) of cervical segments. We found that ipsilateral inputs from the iMVST and LVST were differentially distributed to the MMC and LMC in the different segments, and that all contralateral inputs to MMC and LMC MNs in each segment derive from the cMVST. Using trans‐synaptic RV retrograde tracing as well as pharmacological manipulation of VIIIth nerve‐elicited synaptic responses, we found that a substantial proportion of inputs to both neck and forelimb extensor MNs was mediated monosynaptically, but that polysynaptic inputs were also significant. By recording EMG responses evoked by natural stimulation of the vestibular apparatus, we found that vestibular‐mediated motor output to the neck and forelimb musculature became more robust during the first 10 postnatal days, concurrently with a decrease in the latency of MN discharge evoked by VIIIth nerve electrical stimulation. Together, these results provide insight into the complexity of vestibulospinal connectivity in the cervical spinal cord and a cogent demonstration of the functional maturation that vestibulospinal connections undergo postnatally. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol 76: 1061–1077, 2016  相似文献   

18.
Many secondary vestibular neurons are sensitive to head on trunk rotation during reflex-induced and voluntary head movements. During passive whole body rotation the interaction of head on trunk signals related to the vestibulo-collic reflex with vestibular signals increases the rotational gain of many secondary vestibular neurons, including many that project to the spinal cord. In some units, the sensitivity to head on trunk and vestibular input is matched and the resulting interaction produces an output that is related to the trunk velocity in space. In other units the head on trunk inputs are stronger and the resulting interaction produces an output that is larger during the reflex. During voluntary head movements, inputs related to head on trunk movement combine destructively with vestibular signals, and often cancel the sensory reafferent consequences of self-generated movements. Cancellation of sensory vestibular signals was observed in all of the antidromically identified secondary vestibulospinal units, even though many of these units were not significantly affected by reflexive head on trunk movements. The results imply that the inputs to vestibular neurons related to head on trunk rotation during reflexive and voluntary movements arise from different sources. We suggest that the relative strength of reflexive head on trunk input to different vestibular neurons might reflect the different functional roles they have in controlling the posture of the neck and body.  相似文献   

19.
20.
The removal of spinal afferents in rabbits submitted to unilateral lesion of the labyrinth and fully compensated greatly modified the field potentials as well as the single unit responses recorded from the cortical vestibular area during stimulation of the intact eighth nerve. In particular, an increase of contralateral and a decrease of ipsilateral potentials were observed. These asymmetrical responses indicate that the influence of the spinal cord in compensating the effects of unilateral lesion of the labyrinth is directed to balance not only the electrical activity of the brain-stem structures, but also that of the cerebral cortex. It appears, therefore, that spinal signals intervene not only in the compensation of vestibulospinal and vestibulo-oculomotor functions but also of cortical functions, such as that related to vestibular sensation.  相似文献   

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