When a force is applied to a tooth, mechanoreceptors in the periodontal ligament are stimulated. When teeth are extracted the remnants of the periodontal ligament break down and disappear, but it is not known what happens to the mechanoreceptor neurones that innervated it. The present study seeks to determine the effect of tooth extraction on the population of periodontal ligament mechanoreceptor neurones represented in the mesencephalic nucleus of the fifth cranial nerve.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study observes the maximum 1:1 following frequencies of these mechanoreceptors, as well as their response characteristics before and after vibratory stimuli. Mechanical stimuli were applied to the tip of the crown of the left mandibular canine tooth in cats anaesthetized with alpha-chloralose while recordings were made from functionally single fibres teased from the inferior alveolar nerve. Vibratory stimuli were applied at various frequencies and durations at twice the threshold to that stimulus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study we tested whether the quantitative matching of developing neuronal populations may depend on the size of the afferent supply. Partial deafferentation of the middle division of the parabigeminal nucleus (PBm) was produced before the period of naturally occurring cell death, by reducing the neuronal population of the superior colliculus following partial lesions or eye removal. The number of neurons surviving cell death in the PBm was linearly related to the number of its afferent neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStimulation of the left atrial receptors in dogs anaesthetized with chloralose results in a reflex diuresis and natriuresis. The efferent limb of this reflex is though to have at least three components: nervous, haemodynamic and humoral. The present study was designed to investigate the humoral component in dogs anaesthetized with chloralose; to determine whether a humoral agent, other than vasopressin, might be causative in this reflex diuresis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent work has indicated that direct-current (DC) fields may promote recovery after acute spinal cord injury. In the present experiments, the therapeutic value of an applied DC field was studied in 40 rats with clip compression injuries of the cord at C7-T1. The rats were randomly allocated to one of four groups including 10 rats each: two groups received a 17-gm cord injury and two groups a 53-gm injury.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Neurol Sci
February 1988
Techniques used to monitor the function of the seventh and eighth cranial nerves during acoustic neuroma and other posterior fossa surgery are reviewed. The auditory brainstem response (ABR), electrocochleogram (ECochG) and direct recording from the auditory nerve (CNAP) were compared. The best technique is the ECochG, although in many cases, the CNAP should be used as a back-up technique.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMechanical stimuli in the form of ramp-plateau forces were applied to the tip of the crown of the left mandibular canine tooth in cats anaesthetized with alpha-chloralose. Electrophysiological recordings were made from functionally single fibres teased from the inferior alveolar nerve. The force threshold was determined for 34 periodontal ligament mechanoreceptors at different controlled rates of force application.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relation between threshold, adaptation properties and position of these receptors was studied in anaesthetized cats. Electrophysiological recordings were made from functionally single fibres teased from the inferior alveolar nerve as forces were applied to the tip of the left mandibular canine tooth. Receptors were located within the periodontal ligament by paring away the overlying bone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
January 1988
An accurate neurophysiological technique that is able to monitor both the sensory and motor tracts of the spinal cord is required to assess patients with injury or other lesions of the cord, and for the evaluation of experimental studies of cord injury. We have recorded and characterized the motor and somatosensory evoked potentials (MEPs and SSEPs) from 20 normal rats and from 16 rats with cord lesions. MEPs were elicited by applying constant current anodal stimuli to the sensorimotor cortex (SMC) with the responses recorded from microelectrodes in the spinal cord at T10 (MEP-C) and from a bipolar electrode placed on the contralateral sciatic nerve (MEP-N).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNatural and induced cell degeneration were studied in the mesencephalic parabigeminal nucleus of postnatally developing rats. Natural cell death in the normal parabigeminal nucleus had already started at birth, was maximal at 3 days, and proceeded with a declining rate until postnatal days 8-10 in the dorsal, middle, and ventral divisions that compose the nucleus. The number of neurons declined by approximately one-third between birth and postnatal day 15.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Cardiol
August 1987
Superior vena cava Doppler flow velocities were assessed in two patients presenting with cardiac tamponade. Abnormal Doppler flow patterns correlated with right atrial pressure abnormalities characteristic of tamponade and constriction. During tamponade diastolic superior vena cava flow was abolished, and only systolic flow occurred.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn man, parotid flow has been recorded bilaterally using modified Lashley cups in response to mechanical stimulation of the teeth. The stimulus was defined and controlled by monitoring the rectified and integrated masseter electromyographic activity (e.m.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of increasing heart rate by increasing the rate of atrial pacing in the absence of any reflex effects from atrial receptors, by cooling the vagi to 12 degrees C, was studied in two groups of dogs with different blood volumes. In one group of nine dogs with a high blood volume increasing heart rate, by an amount similar to that reflexly obtained in response to stimulation of atrial receptors, resulted in significant increases in urine flow and sodium excretion; in another group of eight dogs with a low blood volume similar increases in heart rate did not result in a diuresis or natriuresis. The findings suggest that the effects of an increase in heart rate in combination with differences in blood volume could contribute to the previously reported differences in the urinary responses that result from stimulation of atrial receptors in dogs with different blood volumes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe distribution, laterality of projection, and perikaryal sizes of displaced ganglion cells (DGCs) were examined in whole-mounted retinae after massive unilateral injections of horseradish peroxidase along the optic tract in pigmented rats. The DGCs were found predominantly in the lower temporal periphery of the retina. Nearly all DGCs labeled had contralaterally projecting axons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
February 1987
The human auditory steady-state evoked potentials were examined during several different tasks requiring attention. Both Fourier analysis and signal averaging were used to measure the responses at stimulus rates between 37 and 41/sec. There was no effect of attention on the amplitude and phase of the steady-state evoked potentials when subjects either counted successive increments in stimulus intensity or read a book.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosurgery
January 1987
A need exists for an accurate neurophysiological technique that monitors the motor tracts of the cord in patients with spinal cord injury or other cord lesions and for the evaluation of experimental models of cord injury. We have recorded and characterized the motor evoked potentials (MEPs) from 10 normal rats and from 10 rats with the following cord lesions at C-8: 4 animals with complete cord transection and 6 with clip compression injury: 2 at 56.0 g, 2 at 20.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuronal populations were estimated in the ganglion cell layer (GCL) of the adult hamster retina. The total number of neurones averaged 128,000 in Nissl-stained whole-mounts. Following injections of horseradish peroxidase into the brain, an average of 72,000 cells were labeled (mostly above 8 micron in diameter), indicating that 56% of the neurones in the GCL are ganglion cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo demonstrate the effect of elastic and myogenic properties of the vessel wall on the mean coronary vascular resistance during ventricular diastole (m.d.c.
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