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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 4 October 2000, pp. 2078-2112
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Anesthesia and Critical Care, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; and 2Department of Neurobiology and the Program in Neuroscience, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115
Malick, Amy,
Rew M. Strassman, and
Rami Burstein.
Trigeminohypothalamic and Reticulohypothalamic Tract Neurons in
the Upper Cervical Spinal Cord and Caudal Medulla of the Rat. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 2078-2112, 2000. Sensory information that arises in orofacial organs facilitates
exploratory, ingestive, and defensive behaviors that are
essential to overall fitness and survival. Because the hypothalamus
plays an important role in the execution of these behaviors, sensory signals conveyed by the trigeminal nerve must be available to this
brain structure. Recent anatomical studies have shown that a large
number of neurons in the upper cervical spinal cord and caudal medulla
project directly to the hypothalamus. The goal of the present study was
to identify the types of information that these neurons carry to the
hypothalamus and to map the route of their ascending axonal
projections. Single-unit recording and antidromic microstimulation
techniques were used to identify 81 hypothalamic-projecting neurons in
the caudal medulla and upper cervical (C1) spinal
cord that exhibited trigeminal receptive fields. Of the 72 neurons
whose locations were identified, 54 were in laminae I-V of the dorsal
horn at the level of C1 (n = 22)
or nucleus caudalis (Vc, n = 32) and were considered
trigeminohypothalamic tract (THT) neurons because these regions are
within the main projection territory of trigeminal primary afferent
fibers. The remaining 18 neurons were in the adjacent lateral reticular
formation (LRF) and were considered reticulohypothalamic tract (RHT)
neurons. The receptive fields of THT neurons were restricted to the
innervation territory of the trigeminal nerve and included the tongue
and lips, cornea, intracranial dura, and vibrissae. Based on their responses to mechanical stimulation of cutaneous or intraoral receptive
fields, the majority of THT neurons were classified as nociceptive
(38% high-threshold, HT, 42% wide-dynamic-range, WDR), but in
comparison to the spinohypothalamic tract (SHT), a relatively high
percentage of low-threshold (LT) neurons were also found (20%).
Responses to thermal stimuli were found more commonly in WDR than in HT
neurons: 75% of HT and 93% of WDR neurons responded to heat, while
16% of HT and 54% of WDR neurons responded to cold. These
neurons responded primarily to noxious intensities of thermal
stimulation. In contrast, all LT neurons responded to innocuous and
noxious intensities of both heat and cold stimuli, a phenomenon that
has not been described for other populations of mechanoreceptive LT
neurons at spinal or trigeminal levels. In contrast to THT neurons, RHT
neurons exhibited large and complex receptive fields, which extended
over both orofacial ("trigeminal") and extracephalic
("non-trigeminal") skin areas. Their responses to stimulation of
trigeminal receptive fields were greater than their responses to
stimulation of non-trigeminal receptive fields, and their responses to
innocuous stimuli were induced only when applied to trigeminal
receptive fields. As described for SHT axons, the axons of THT and RHT
neurons ascended through the contralateral brain stem to the supraoptic
decussation (SOD) in the lateral hypothalamus; 57% of them
then crossed the midline to reach the ipsilateral hypothalamus.
Collateral projections were found in the superior colliculus,
substantia nigra, red nucleus, anterior pretectal nucleus, and in the
lateral, perifornical, dorsomedial, suprachiasmatic, and supraoptic
hypothalamic nuclei. Additional projections (which have not been
described previously for SHT neurons) were found rostral to the
hypothalamus in the caudate-putamen, globus pallidus, and substantia
innominata. The findings that nonnociceptive signals reach the
hypothalamus primarily through the direct THT route, whereas
nociceptive signals reach the hypothalamus through both the direct THT
and the indirect RHT routes suggest that highly prioritized painful
signals are transferred in parallel channels to ensure that this
critical information reaches the hypothalamus, a brain area that
regulates homeostasis and other humoral responses required for the
survival of the organism.
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