DISCHARGE PATTERNS OF LARYNGEAL MOTONEURONS IN THE CAT - AN INTRACELLULAR STUDY

被引:50
作者
BARILLOT, JC
GRELOT, L
REDDAD, S
BIANCHI, AL
机构
[1] Département de Physiologie et Neurophysiologie, C.N.R.S. U.R.A. 205, Faculté des Sciences et Techniques Saint-Jérôme, Marseille
关键词
Inhibitory postsynaptic potential; Laryngeal motoneuron; Membrane potential; Respiration;
D O I
10.1016/0006-8993(90)90314-2
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
In decerebrate cats, stable intracellular recordings were made from 37 laryngeal motoneurones, the membrane potentials of which varied in relation to respiration. These motoneurones were identified as laryngeal since all were antidromically activated by stimulation of the recurrent laryngeal nerve, but in two, the antidromic activity could only be elicited by vagal stimulation (vagotomized cats). The cell bodies were all located within the nucleus ambiguus. Sixteen cells were depolarized during the phrenic burst and were classified as inspiratory laryngeal motoneurones (ILM). Thet repolarized at end-inspiration and received two successive waves of postsynaptic inhibition during expiration: an early, strong one and a late (end-expiratory), weaker one. The decay of the first wave was related to the duration of postinspiratory phrenic activity. Twenty-one cells depolarized abruptly in early expiration followed by a more-or-less gradual repolarization. They were classified as expiratory laryngeal motoneurones (ELM). All ELM were strongly inhibited during inspiration. Some of them received weak inhibition during end expiratory phase. The rapid and large depolarization observed during early expiration (and consequent maximal discharge frequency) can be explained by two summating mechanisms: a postinhibitory rebound resulting from the removal of inhibition during inspiration, and an excitatory phenomenon of unknown origin. The amplitude of this excitatory phenomenon was largest in cats with the most residual (early expiratory) phrenic activity. To explain the hyperpolarizations occurring in ELM during late expiratory and inspiratory phases and those occurring in ILM during early expiration, we hypothesize that reciprocal inhibition exists between networks controlling ILM and ELM activities or between these motoneurones themselves. The cause of the relationship between residual phrenic nerve activity and the events in early expiration in both ILM (hyperpolarization) and ELM (depolarization) remains to be elucidated. Our observations are consistent with the braking effect on expiratory flow in postinspiration caused by the activation of the adductor muscles driven by the expiratory laryngeal motoneurones, and the release of the abductor muscles driven by the inspiratory laryngeal motoneurones. © 1990.
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页码:99 / 106
页数:8
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