Abstract: | Responses of 137 neurons of the rostral pole of the reticular and anterior ventral thalamic nuclei to electrical stimulation of the ventrolateral nucleus and motor cortex were studied in 17 cats immobilized with D-tubocurarine. The number of neurons responding antidromically to stimulation of the ventrolateral nucleus was 10.5% of all cells tested (latent period of response 0.7–3.0 msec), whereas to stimulation of the motor cortex it was 11.0% (latent period of response 0.4–4.0 msec). Neurons with a dividing axon, one branch of which terminated in the thalamic ventrolateral nuclei, the other in the motor cortex, were found. Orthodromic excitation was observed in 78.9% of neurons tested during stimulation of the ventrolateral nucleus and in 52.5% of neurons during stimulation of the motor cortex. Altogether 55.6% of cells responded to stimulation of the ventrolateral nucleus with a discharge of 3 to 20 action potentials with a frequency of 130–350 Hz. Similar discharges in response to stimulation of the motor cortex were observed in 30.5% of neurons tested. An inhibitory response was recorded in only 6.8% of cells. Convergence of influences from the thalamic ventrolateral nucleus and motor cortex was observed in 55.7% of neurons. The corticofugal influence of the motor cortex on responses arising in these cells to testing stimulation of the ventrolateral nucleus could be either inhibitory or facilitatory.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 10, No. 5, pp. 460–468, September–October, 1978. |