Plotnik Meir, Marlinski Vladimir, Goldberg Jay M
Department of Neurobiology, Pharmacology, and Physiology, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2002 Sep;88(3):1234-44. doi: 10.1152/jn.2002.88.3.1234.
To study presumed efferent-mediated responses, we determined if afferents responded to head rotations that stimulated semicircular canals other than the organ being innervated. To minimize stimulation of an afferent's own canal, its plane was placed nearly orthogonal to the rotation plane. Otolith units were tested in a horizontal head position with the ear placed near the rotation axis to minimize linear forces. Under these circumstances, angular-velocity trapezoids (2-s ramps, 2-s plateau) evoked excitatory responses for both rotation directions. These type III responses were considerably larger in decerebrate than in anesthetized preparations. In addition to their being exclusively excitatory, the responses resembled those obtained with electrical stimulation of efferent pathways in including per-stimulus and more prolonged post-stimulus components and in being larger in irregularly discharging than in regularly discharging units. Responses, which were not seen for rotations <80 degrees/s, grew as velocity increased between 80 and 500 degrees/s but were seldom larger than 20 spikes/s. Complete section of the VIIIth nerve abolished type III responses, leaving conventional afferent responses intact. To study the separate contributions of canals on the two sides, responses were compared when the labyrinths were intact and when the ipsilateral or contralateral horizontal canal was mechanically inactivated. Both sides contributed to the efferent-mediated responses. That afferents could be influenced from the contralateral labyrinth was confirmed with the use of unilateral galvanic currents. Following inactivation, excitatory responses were produced by rotations exciting or inhibiting the intact horizontal canal with the responses resulting from excitatory rotations being much larger. Such a response asymmetry is consistent with a semicircular-canal origin for the type III responses. A similar asymmetry was seen in the post-stimulus responses to contralateral cathodal (excitatory) and anodal (inhibitory) galvanic currents. We conclude that the efferent system receives a sufficiently powerful vestibular input from both the ipsilateral and contralateral labyrinths to affect afferent discharge.
为了研究假定的传出介导反应,我们确定传入神经是否会对头旋转产生反应,这种头旋转刺激的是除了其支配的器官之外的半规管。为了尽量减少对传入神经自身半规管的刺激,将其平面放置得几乎与旋转平面正交。在水平头位下测试耳石单元,将耳朵置于靠近旋转轴的位置,以尽量减少线性力。在这些情况下,角速度梯形波(2秒斜坡、2秒平台期)在两个旋转方向上均诱发兴奋性反应。这些III型反应在去大脑动物中比在麻醉制剂中要大得多。除了它们完全是兴奋性的之外,这些反应类似于通过电刺激传出通路所获得的反应,包括刺激期和更长的刺激后成分,并且在不规则放电的单元中比在规则放电的单元中更大。对于<80度/秒的旋转未观察到反应,反应在80至500度/秒之间随速度增加而增强,但很少超过20个峰电位/秒。第八对脑神经的完全切断消除了III型反应,而传统的传入反应保持完整。为了研究两侧半规管的单独作用,比较了迷路完整时以及同侧或对侧水平半规管机械失活时的反应。两侧均对传出介导反应有贡献。使用单侧直流电证实传入神经可受对侧迷路的影响。失活后,通过刺激或抑制完整水平半规管的旋转产生兴奋性反应,兴奋性旋转产生的反应要大得多。这种反应不对称与III型反应的半规管起源一致。在对侧阴极(兴奋性)和阳极(抑制性)直流电的刺激后反应中也观察到类似的不对称。我们得出结论,传出系统从同侧和对侧迷路接收足够强大的前庭输入以影响传入放电。