Abstract: | Postsynaptic potentials of motoneurons of the masseter and digastric muscles evoked by stimulation of the infraorbital nerve with a strength of between 1 and 10 thresholds were investigated in cats anesthetized with a mixture of chloralose and pentobarbital. Depending on their ability to be activated by low-threshold afferents of this nerve, motoneurons of the masseter were divided into two groups. Stimuli with a strength of 1.2–2.5 times above threshold for the most excitable fibers of the infraorbital nerve evoked short-latency EPSPs in the motoneurons of the first group; a further increase in stimulus strength (3–9 thresholds) led to the appearance of IPSPs with latent periods of 2.8–3.5 msec. Motoneurons of the second group responded to stimulation of the infraorbital nerve with a strength of 3–9 thresholds by IPSPs whose latent periods varied from 6 to 8 msec. Stimuli below 3 thresholds in strength evoked no responses in these motoneurons. Stimulation of the infraorbital nerve with pulses of between 1 and 2 thresholds in strength evoked EPSPs in digastric motoneurons, but an increase in the strength of stimulation led to action potential generation. The presence of many excitatory and inhibitory inputs formed by afferent fibers of different types evidently provides a basis for functional diversity of jaw-opening and jaw-closing reflexes.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 12, No. 6, pp. 596–603, November–December, 1980. |