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J Neurophysiol 79: 304-311, 1998;
0022-3077/98 $5.00
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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 79 No. 1 January 1998, pp. 304-311
Copyright ©1998 The American Physiological Society

Involvement of the Caudal Medulla in Negative Feedback Mechanisms Triggered by Spatial Summation of Nociceptive Inputs

Olivier Gall, Didier Bouhassira, Djamel Chitour, and Daniel Le Bars

Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U.161, 75014 Paris Cedex, France

Gall, Olivier, Didier Bouhassira, Djamel Chitour, and Daniel Le Bars. Involvement of the caudal medulla in negative feedback mechanisms triggered by spatial summation of nociceptive inputs. J. Neurophysiol. 79: 304-311, 1998. In the rat, applying noxious heat stimuli to the excitatory receptive fields and simultaneously to adjacent, much larger, areas of the body results in a surface-related reduction in the responses of lumbar dorsal horn convergent neurons. These inhibitory effects induced by spatial summation of nociceptive inputs have been shown to involve a supraspinally mediated negative feedback loop. The aim of the present study was to determine the anatomic level of integration of these controls and hence to ascertain what relationships they might share with other descending controls modulating the transmission of nociceptive signals. The responses of lumbar convergent neurons to noxious stimulation (15-s immersion in a 48°C water bath) applied to increasing areas of the ipsilateral hindlimb were examined in several anesthetized preparations: sham-operated rats, rats with acute transections performed at various levels of the brain stem, and spinal rats. The effects of heterotopic noxious heat stimulation (tail immersion in a 52°C water bath) on the C-fiber responses of these neurons also were analyzed. The electrophysiological properties of dorsal horn convergent neurons, including their responses to increasing stimulus surface areas, were not different in sham-operated animals and in animals the brain stems of which had been transected completely rostral to a plane -2.8 mm remote from interaural line (200 µm caudal to the caudal end of the rostral ventromedial medulla). In these animals, increasing the stimulated area size from 4.8 to 18 cm2 resulted in a 35-45% reduction in the responses. In contrast, relative to responses elicited by 4.8 cm2 stimuli, responses to 18 cm2 were unchanged or even increased in animals with transections at more caudal level and in spinal animals. Inhibitions of the C-fiber responses elicited by heterotopic noxious heat stimulation were in the 70-80% range during conditioning in sham-operated animals and in animals with rostral brain stem transections. Such effects were reduced significantly (residual inhibitions in the 10-20% range) in animals with transections >500 µm caudal to the caudal end of the rostral ventromedial medulla and in spinal animals. It is concluded that the caudal medulla constitutes a key region for the expression of negative feed-back mechanisms triggered by both spatial summation of noxious inputs and heterotopic noxious inputs.




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