Abstract: | A study of the tonic electrical activity of nerves containing preganglionic and postganglionic fibers in the superior cervical and stellate sympathetic ganglia of cats and rabbits has shown that this activity consists of groups of spikes synchronous with the pulse or respiration, and occurs on a background of irregular low-amplitude impulses. The frequency of spikes is higher (250/sec) in nerves containing preganglionic fibers than in those containing postganglionic fibers (100/sec). Groups of spikes in a nerve containing preganglionic fibers correspond in some preparations to groups of spikes of lower frequency in a nerve containing postganglionic fibers of the same ganglion; in other preparations, this correspondence was lacking, apparently due to the absence of synaptic contacts between those groups of pre- and postganglionic neurons whose activity was recorded. Neurons send axons to different nerves (cardiac and vertebral) of the stellate ganglion discharged synchronously in some preparations, and asynchronously in others. Where synchronization was observed, the neurons discharged in rhythm with cardiac contractions.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 1, No. 3, pp. 303–308, November–December, 1969. |