Experiments were performed to characterize cerebral cortical activity and pain behavior elicited by electrical stimulation of the tooth pulp in unanesthetized monkeys. Four monkeys were trained on two different operant paradigms: two on a simple escape task and two on an appetitive tolerance-escape task. All monkeys were implanted with bipolar stimulating electrodes in the right maxillary canine tooth and subdural recording electrodes over the left primary (SI) and/or secondary (SII) somatosensory cortices. Subdural tooth pulp-evoked potentials (TPEPs) recorded over the SII consisted of components P1 (27.5 ms), N1 (40.3 ms), P2 (84.0 ms), N2 (163.5 ms), P3 (295.3 ms), and N3 (468.0 ms). The long latency component (P3-N3) was found exclusively over the SII and was elicited by high intensity stimulation. The appearance of component P3-N3 required the recruitment of A delta nerve fibers into the maxillary nerve compound action potential and was correlated with high frequencies of escape. Administration of morphine sulfate (4 mg/kg, i.m.) caused a contemporaneous reduction in escape frequency and in the amplitude of P3-N3 recorded over the SII. The relationships between TPEP amplitude, escape behavior and A delta nerve fiber activity strongly suggest that the SII is involved with nociception and pain behavior.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0006-8993(86)91368-5 | DOI Listing |
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