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Quantitative analysis of laryngeal mechanosensitivity in the cat and rabbit.
Author(s) -
Davis P J,
Nail B S
Publication year - 1987
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.1987.sp016625
Subject(s) - tonic (physiology) , receptive field , superior laryngeal nerve , stimulation , larynx , anatomy , cats , afferent , nerve conduction velocity , mechanoreceptor , rabbit (cipher) , chemistry , medicine , biology , neuroscience , mathematics , statistics
1. Single afferent fibres in the internal branch of the superior laryngeal nerve which responded to light touch or gentle probing of discrete areas of the exposed epithelium of the opened larynx were identified in anaesthetized, paralysed cats (148 fibres) and rabbits (58 fibres). 2. A quantitative examination of the sensitivity of these laryngeal mechanoreceptors to both static (step indentations) and dynamic (vibratory) forms of mechanical stimulation was undertaken using a servo‐controlled mechanical stimulator. 3. In both species two predominant classes of mechanoreceptors were observed (Boushey, Richardson, Widdicombe & Wise, 1974). One class was distinguished by a regular and continuous pattern of activity at a frequency of 10‐70 Hz (tonic fibres, sixty‐six in cat, thirty‐five in rabbit). The other class was silent or (more rarely) irregularly active at a very low frequency (silent fibres, eighty‐two in cat, twenty‐three in rabbit). 4. The location of the receptive fields was determined by manual probing. Inter‐species and regional variations in receptive field location were observed for the two fibre groups. 5. Conduction velocity was measured for twenty‐one tonic and seven silent fibres in the rabbit by a pre‐triggered averaging technique. The results obtained (tonic: range 10.8‐30.0, mean +/‐ S.E. of mean 21.4 +/‐ 1.2 m/s; silent: 14.8‐28.6, 20.4 +/‐ 1.8 m/s) were characteristic of group III afferent fibres but were not significantly different for the two classes. 6. Both classes of receptor showed a response at the onset of a step indentation of the region of the mucosa that corresponded to their receptive field. Subsequent to this brief initial response the behaviour of the two classes diverged markedly. Tonic fibres were invariably slowly adapting whereas most (forty‐four out of fifty‐five in cat; twenty‐two out of twenty‐three in rabbit) silent fibres were rapidly adapting, at least for smaller indentation amplitudes. 7. Receptors of both classes were readily entrained to discharge at the same frequency as the probe stimulator (1:1 entrainment) when this was made to vibrate upon the receptive area for test periods of 0.5 or 1.0 s. Tuning curves were constructed of the minimum amplitudes required to elicit 1:1 entrainment throughout an entire test period at various frequencies. 8. Individual fibres in the two classes could be entrained at frequencies up to 400 Hz or more at sensitive (e.g. less than 100 microns) vibratory amplitudes. However, all fibres were less sensitive at these higher frequencies than at some lower point on the frequency scale.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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