Abstract: | The effect of a steady current passed through the spinal cord on antidromic discharges in primary afferent groups of Agb cutaneous nerves of the hind limb, evoked by single and paired stimulation of the terminals of these fibers, was investigated by Wall's technique in acute experiments on spinal and anesthetized cats. A current of up to 50–100 µA, flowing in the dorso-ventral direction, led to an increase in amplitude of antidromic dischanges evoked by single stimulation of afferent terminals; if the current flowed in the opposite direction, the opposite effect was observed. The relative degree of facilitation of antidromic discharges caused by conditioning stimulation of these same fibers was reduced by a polarizing current in either direction. It is suggested that the effects of the action of a steady current flowing through the spinal cord observed in these experiments are due mainly to shifts of membrane potential in primary afferent terminals.Dnepropetrovskii State University. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 14, No. 4, pp. 386–391, July–August, 1982. |