Abstract: | The effects of cadmium ions on synaptic transmission in the frog tectum were investigated in acute experiments using quantal EEG recording techniques (readings of extracellular monosynaptic potential induced by activating the synapses of a single axon) 1]. Superfusion of the tectum by 10–200 µM CdCl2 reversibly inhibits EEG quanta, reduces their duration (measured at 50% amplitude level) and increases synaptic delay. The results of this study confirm the concept formed from in vitro experiments of votage-dependent calcium channels as one of the likely Cd2+ action sites at central synapses. It is concluded that cadmium-induced industrial pollution may also pose a threat in the form of damaging action on the central nervous system.Medical Institute, Ministry of Public Health of the Lithuanian SSR, Kaunas. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 21, No. 6, pp. 756–765, November–December, 1989. |