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J Neurophysiol (March 20, 2003). doi:10.1152/jn.00066.2003
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Submitted on January 24, 2003
Accepted on March 12, 2003

Fractal Activity Generated Independently by Medullary Sympathetic Premotor and Preganglionic Sympathetic Neurons

Hakan S. Orer1, Mahasweta Das2, Susan M. Barman2, and Gerard L. Gebber2*

1 Pharmacology, Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey; Pharmacology & Toxicology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA
2 Pharmacology & Toxicology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: gebber{at}msu.edu.

In anesthetized cats with cervical spinal cord transection, Fano factor analysis was used to test for time-scale invariant (fractal) fluctuations in spike counts of single preganglionic cervical sympathetic neurons (PSNs) and putative sympathetic premotor neurons located in the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) and caudal medullary raphe. The medullary neurons exhibited cardiac-related activity and their axons projected to the spinal cord, as demonstrated by antidromic activation. The variance-to-mean spike count ratio (Fano factor) was plotted as a function of the window size used to count spikes. The Fano factor curves for 7 PSNs, 8 RVLM neurons, and 8 raphe neurons contained a power law relationship extending over more than one time scale. In these cases, random shuffling of the interspike intervals in the original time series eliminated the power law relationship. Thus, the power law relationships can be attributed to long-range correlations among interspike intervals rather than simply to the distribution of the intervals which is not changed by shuffling the data. It is concluded that PSNs and sympathetic premotor neurons in the medulla can independently generate fractal firing patterns.




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G. L. Gebber, H. S. Orer, and S. M. Barman
Fractal Noises and Motions in Time Series of Presympathetic and Sympathetic Neural Activities
J Neurophysiol, February 1, 2006; 95(2): 1176 - 1184.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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