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Functional reorganization of sensory pathways in the rat spinal dorsal horn following peripheral nerve injury
Functional reorganization of sensory pathways in the rat spinal dorsal horn following sciatic nerve transection was examined using spinal cord slices with an attached dorsal root. Slices were obtained from animals whose sciatic nerve had been transected 2-4 weeks previously and compared to sham-oper...
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Published in: | The Journal of physiology 2001-04, Vol.532 (1), p.241-250 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Functional reorganization of sensory pathways in the rat spinal dorsal horn following sciatic nerve transection was examined
using spinal cord slices with an attached dorsal root. Slices were obtained from animals whose sciatic nerve had been transected
2-4 weeks previously and compared to sham-operated controls.
Whole-cell recordings from substantia gelatinosa neurones in sham-operated rats, to which nociceptive information was preferentially
transmitted, revealed that dorsal root stimulation sufficient to activate Aδ afferent fibres evoked a mono- and/or polysynaptic
EPSC in 111 of 131 (â85 %) neurones. This is in contrast to the response following Aβ fibre stimulation, where monosynaptic
EPSCs were observed in 2 of 131 (â2 %) neurones and polysynaptic EPSCs were observed in 18 of 131 (â14 %) neurones.
In sciatic nerve-transected rats, however, a polysynaptic EPSC following stimulation of Aβ afferents was elicited in 30 of
37 (81 %) neurones and a monosynaptic EPSC evoked by Aβ afferent stimulation was detected in a subset of neurones (4 of 37,
â11 %).
These observations suggest that, following sciatic nerve transection, large myelinated Aβ afferent fibres establish synaptic
contact with interneurones and transmit innocuous information to substantia gelatinosa. This functional reorganization of
the sensory circuitry may constitute an underlying mechanism, at least in part, for sensory abnormalities following peripheral
nerve injuries. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1111/j.1469-7793.2001.0241g.x |