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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 2 August 1999, pp. 611-625
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Physiology, Göteborg University, SE 40530 Göteborg, Sweden; and 2Division of Neurosurgery, Barrow Neurological Institute, Phoenix, Arizona 85013
Norrsell, U. and
A. D. Craig.
Behavioral Thermosensitivity After Lesions of Thalamic Target
Areas of a Thermosensory Spinothalamic Pathway in the Cat. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 611-625, 1999. The
ability of 17 cats to discriminate floor temperatures 2-4°C below
the ambient temperature was tested before and after unilateral
electrolytic thalamic lesions. The lesions were made contralateral to
the paws showing better performance in the temperature discrimination
task. They were aimed at one or more of the three main target areas of
thermoreceptive-specific lamina I spinothalamic neurons [i.e., the
nucleus submedius, the dorsomedial aspect of the ventral posterior
medial nucleus, and the ventral aspect of the basal ventral medial
nucleus (vVMb)], following microelectrode mapping of somatosensory
thalamus. The thermosensory consequences of each lesion were measured
in postoperative testing, beginning 6-8 days after the final
preoperative test session. A mild but definite thermosensory deficiency
was found in five cats, in which the response behavior on the
contralateral side was reduced below the 69% criterion level for
several sessions. Histological analysis indicated that these cats
differed only by the inclusion in the lesion of all or part of vVMb.
Consequently this area appears to be important for cats' thermosensory
behavior. Nevertheless even large lesions of virtually all of the
thermoreceptive lamina I spinothalamic projection areas produced only
this mild thermosensory deficit in stark contrast with the massive
defect observed previously after spinal lesions of the middle of the
lateral funiculus, where lamina I axons ascend. Accordingly such spinal
lesions were added at the C4 level, on the same side as the
thalamic lesions, in six cats 3 mo after the thalamic surgery. These
lesions caused severe contralateral defects (i.e., chance level
performance). Thus the present findings are taken to indicate that
contralateral ascending projections to vVMb in the thalamus participate
in cats' thermosensory discrimination but that ascending projections
to the brain stem must play an important role in their behavioral thermosensitivity.
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