The Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine
Online ISSN : 1349-3329
Print ISSN : 0040-8727
ISSN-L : 0040-8727
Disinhibition of Perigeniculate Reticular Neurons Following Chronic Ablation of the Visual Cortex in Rats
ICHIJI SUMITOMOMichio SUGITANIKITSUYA IWAMA
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

1977 Volume 122 Issue 4 Pages 321-329

Details
Abstract

Effects of chronic ablation of the visual cortex (VC) were studied in the perigeniculate reticular neurons (POE neurons) which were located in the thalamic reticular nucleus immediately adjacent to the dorsal nucleus of the lateral geniculate body and identified as the I-cells of Burke and Sefton. In rats with the intact VC the PGR neurons responded to single shock stimulation of the optic tract (OT) with bursts of spike spaced regularly. During the inter-burst period the neurons were inhibited, indicat-ing that except for the primary spike burst, others were postinhibitory rebound excitation. In the VC-ablated PGR neurons there were no changes in the primary spike burst, but the remaining ones were very weak or sometimes missing, suggesting that the inhibition was poorly developed. With double shock stimulation of OT it was established that after showing the primary spike burst, the VC-ablated POR neurons suffered a less intense inhibition than control. To a diffuse, sustained illumination, the normal PGR neurons showed on- and off-responses, whereas the VC-ablated ones were tonically activated during the presence of illumination. These findings were taken as indicating that the inhibitory mechanism for the PGR neurons were made less active after the VC had been ablated chronically.

Content from these authors
© Tohoku University Medical Press
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top