Abstract: | Evoked electrical discharges in the spinal cord roots and dorsal surface ipsilateral to the previously severed sciatic nerve (as well as on the contralateral side) were investigated in rats one, three, seven, and 14 days after tractotomy. Monosynaptic reflex discharges in the ventral roots were found to return to 20–40% of the level of this parameter as measured on the contralateral side within seven and 14 days after tractotomy. Mean amplitude of antidromic dorsal root discharges, afferent peak, and the N1 component of potential(s) at the dorsal surface ipsilateral to the severed nerve barely altered, remaining significantly lower than on the contralateral side. Mechanisms are suggested for the increase in monosynaptic reflex ventral root discharges ipsilateral to the severed nerve following tractotomy — thought to be largely due to raised sensitivity to transmitter at the motoneuronal membrane resulting from degeneration of synapses of descending pathways.Medical Institute of the Ukrainian Ministry of Health, Dnepropetrovsk. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 21, No. 3, pp. 366–371, May–June, 1989. |