Existence of respiratory interneurons in the cervical spinal cord of the rabbit |
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Authors: | R Palisses D Viala |
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Affiliation: | Institut des neurosciences C.N.R.S., Université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie Faculté des Sciences Mirande, Dijon. |
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Abstract: | A spinal "respiration" generator has been shown to fire phrenic motoneurones in rhythmic bursts. It is very likely driven through bulbo-spinal inspiratory neurones in intact preparations. Although no direct evidence for respiratory interneurones at the C4-C5 spinal levels has been obtained so far (except for Renshaw cells ), it is currently believed that only few inspiratory inputs to the phrenic motoneurones are transmitted monosynaptically from the medulla. We have tried here to record spinal interneuronal respiratory activities in decorticate, unanaesthetized, vagotomized and curarized rabbit preparations. Different functional categories of interneurones could be identified at the C4-C5 spinal levels: inspiratory and expiratory interneurons with various discharge patterns which rather well correspond to the functional categories of inspiratory and expiratory bulbo-spinal neurones described by Bianchi and Richter. In addition, multiunit inspiratory bursting could be followed over several 100 microns during each electrode penetration. The different categories of interneurones were encountered laterally from 700 to 1,000 microns, at depths ranging from 300 to 500 microns dorsally to the phrenic nucleus, down to the nucleus itself. These results indicate that part of the medullary inspiratory drive is channelled via spinal cord interneurones; they also suggest that an inhibition of phrenic motoneurones from the bulbo-spinal expiratory drive takes place via interneurones. |
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