Spontaneous and evoked activities of interpositus nucleus neurons before and after lesion of the cerebellar cortex
- PMID: 3452968
Spontaneous and evoked activities of interpositus nucleus neurons before and after lesion of the cerebellar cortex
Abstract
Spontaneous and evoked activities of nucleus interpositus neurons (IN) of the cerebellum were examined before and after cerebellar paravermal cortex lesions in cats anesthetized with alpha-chloralose. It was found that spontaneous activity increased dramatically following cortical ablation: before the lesion only 4% of cells encountered fired at a rate exceeding 80 impulses/sec., whereas up to 40% discharged at this rate postoperatively. Responses to paw stimulation were also altered: the initial excitation was lengthened from 8.5 to 15.8 msec; narrow; trough causing segmentation in this excitation, which seems to result from Purkinje cell inhibition, was absent; and the succeeding inhibitory period was reduced in duration by 50%. Also after the lesion there was a strong tendency for the neurons to discharge in bursts. It is suggested that changes in cell activity in the IN following cortical lesion unveil neural mechanisms of motor disturbances in lesioned cats.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Miscellaneous