Abstract: | Different types of reflex discharges were produced in various preparations by stimulating the dorsal root of isolated frog spinal cord. These ranged from multiphasic low-amplitude waves to distinctly synchronized monosynaptic response. The discharges were followed by facilitation in the former and deep, protracted inhibition of response to test dorsal root stimulation in the latter. When interstimulus intervals measured 40–50 msec, inhibitory action was less pronounced than at shorter (15–30 msec) or longer (60–100 msec) intervals, thus indicating that at least two types of inhibition were at work, one at an earlier and the other at a later stage. Strychnine at a concentration of 10–5 M effectively reinforced the former and blocked the latter, while 10–4 M d-tubocurarine attenuated both types of inhibition substantially. It is concluded that inhibition of response occurs mainly as a result of recurrent activation of inhibitory systems via recurrent motoneuron axon collaterals when frog spinal cord afferents are excited. Intensity of the later (presynaptic) and earlier (postsynaptic) inhibition of reflex transmission is determined by the degree of synchrony in motoneuronal discharge in response to orthodromic stimulation.Institute of Medical Radiology, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Obninsk, Kaluga Oblast. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 19, No. 3, pp. 343–350, May–June, 1987. |