Abstract: | Experiments on cats using extra- and intracellular recording methods showed that stimulation of the motor cortex of both hemispheres leads to considerable modulation of responses to stimulation of cutaneous and muscular lower limb afferents in spinal ventral horn interneurons in segments L6, 7. Three types of conditioning corticofugal effect were observed: facilitation, inhibition, and facilitation followed by inhibition (biphasic effect), and inhibitory effects predominated. The duration of facilitation of responses did not exceed 30–40 msec. The characteristics of the time course of inhibition varied: in some cases it began with relatively short intervals (8–15 msec), in other cases with an interval of 30–40 msec; its duration was 125–500 msec, or sometimes more. The effect of cortical stimulation on responses to stimulation of various afferent inputs of the same interneuron was shown to differ. The character of the conditioning corticofugal effect correlated with the latent period of segmental responses: facilitation was observed only in responses with a relatively short latent period (under 5 msec); responses with a longer latent period were mainly inhibited. The type of cortical effect also depended on the function performed by the activated afferent input. It is suggested that differential descending control of segmental polysynaptic responses recorded in ventral horn interneurons with wide convergence of afferent influences takes place in the initial stages of the reflex are. The mechanism of this control is discussed.I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neiorofizologiya, Vol. 14, No. 6, pp. 563–571, November–December, 1982. |