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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 86 No. 5 November 2001, pp. 2393-2404
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Surgery and 2Department of Neuroscience, Brown Medical School, Rhode Island Hospital, Providence, Rhode Island 02903
Takeshita, S.,
H. Hirata, and
D. A. Bereiter.
Intensity Coding by TMJ-Responsive Neurons in Superficial Laminae
of Caudal Medullary Dorsal Horn of the Rat. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 2393-2404, 2001. Temporomandibular
disorders (TMD) represent a family of recurrent conditions that often
cause pain in the temporomandibular joint (TMJ) region and muscles of
mastication. To determine if TMJ-responsive neurons encoded the
intensity of pro-inflammatory chemical signals, dose-effect
relationships were assessed after direct injection bradykinin into the
joint space and compared with responses after injection of glutamate or
saline. Neurons were recorded from superficial laminae of the
trigeminal subnucleus caudalis/upper cervical cord junction region
(Vc/C2) and identified by palpation of the TMJ
region in barbiturate-anesthetized male rats. The majority (62 of 84)
of units received convergent input from facial skin, while 26% were
driven only by deep input from the TMJ region. Conduction-velocity
based on the latency to firing after electrical stimulation of the TMJ
region indicated 64% of units were driven by A-delta fiber input only.
Bradykinin (0.1-10 µM) excited 69% of neurons tested, and 70% (19 of 27) of these units were activated by the lowest dose (0.1 µM).
Glutamate (50-200 mM) excited 27% of units; however, when tested
after bradykinin, 58% of units were activated by glutamate. Some TMJ
units (17%) were excited by saline injection alone and not enhanced
further by bradykinin or glutamate. Most (88%) TMJ units were
activated by injection of the small fiber excitant, mustard oil (20%
solution), into the TMJ region. Units responsive to bradykinin or
glutamate were not restricted to particular classes [e.g., wide
dynamic range (WDR), nociceptive specific (NS), deep only]. A small
percentage of TMJ units (~15%) were activated antidromically from
the contralateral posterior thalamus. In parallel studies using
c-fos immunocytochemistry, bradykinin (1 µM) injection
into the TMJ region produced a greater number of Fos-positive neurons
at the Vc/C2 region than glutamate (200 mM) or
saline. These results revealed two broad classes of TMJ units that
encoded the intensity of pro-inflammatory chemical stimuli applied to
the TMJ region, units that received convergent nociceptive input from
facial skin (i.e., WDR and NS units) and units that responded only to
deep input from the TMJ region. On the basis of encoding properties and
efferent projection status, it is concluded that activation of TMJ
units within the superficial laminae at the Vc/C2
region contribute to the diffuse and spreading nature of TMD pain sensation.
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