988 resultados para transcutaneous electric nerve stimulation
Resumo:
The electrical stimulation of the dorsal columns of the spinal cord exerts a dual analgesic and vasodilatory effect on ischemic tissues. It is increasingly considered a valuable method to treat severe and otherwise intractable coronary and peripheral artery disease. The quality of the results depends from both a strict selection of the patients by vascular specialists and the frequency and quality of the follow-up controls. However the indications, limits, mode of action and results of spinal cord stimulation are still poorly understood. This article, based on a personal experience of 164 implantations for peripheral and coronary artery disease, aims to draw attention to this technique and to provide information on recent and future developments.
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The value of various indexes to characterize the stimulus-response curve of human motor nerves was assessed in 40 healthy subjects recruited from four European centers of investigation (Créteil, Lausanne, Liège, Marseille). Stimulus-response curves were established by stimulating the right median and ulnar motor nerves at the wrist, with stimulus durations of 0.05 and 0.5 ms. The following parameters were studied: the threshold intensity of stimulation to obtain 10% (I 10), 50% (I 50), and 90% (I 90) of the maximal compound muscle action potential, the ratios I 10/I 50, I 90/I 50, (I 90 - I 10)/I 10, (I 90-I 50)/I 50, and (I 50 - I 10)/I 10, and the slopes of the stimulus-response curves with or without normalization to I 50. For each parameter, within-center variability and reproducibility (in a test-retest study) were assessed and between-center comparisons were made. For most of the parameters, the results varied significantly within and between the centers. Within the centers, only the ratios I 10/I 50 and I 90/I 50 were found constant and reproducible. Between the centers, the absolute intensity thresholds (I 10, I 50, I 90) and the ratio I 90/I 50 did not show significant differences at stimulus duration of 0.5 ms, whatever the stimulated nerve. The reduced variability and good reproducibility of the ratios I 10/I 50 and I 90/I 50 open perspectives in neurophysiological practice for the use of these indexes of the stimulus-response curve, a rapid and noninvasive test.
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BACKGROUND: Direct colonic electrical stimulation may prove to be a treatment option for specific motility disorders such as chronic constipation. The aim of this study was to provoke colonic contractions using electrical stimulation delivered from a battery-operated device. METHODS: Electrodes were inserted into the caecal seromuscular layer of eight anaesthetized pigs. Contractions were induced by a neurostimulator (Medtronic 3625). Caecal motility was measured simultaneously by video image analysis, manometry and a technique assessing colonic transit. RESULTS: Caecal contractions were generated using 8-10 V amplitude, 1000 micros pulse width, 120 Hz frequency for 10-30 s, with an intensity of 7-15 mA. The maximal contraction strength was observed after 20-25 s. Electrical stimulation was followed by a relaxation phase of 1.5-2 min during which contractions propagated orally and aborally over at least 10 cm. Spontaneous and stimulated caecal motility values were significantly different for both intraluminal pressure (mean(s.d.) 332(124) and 463(187) mmHg respectively; P < 0.001, 42 experiments) and movement of contents (1.6(0.9) and 3.9(2.8) mm; P < 0.001, 40 experiments). CONCLUSION: Electrical stimulation modulated caecal motility, and provoked localized and propagated colonic contractions.
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Résumé Les canaux ioniques ASICs (acid-sensing ion channels) appartiennent à la famille des canaux ENaC/Degenerin. Pour l'instant, quatre gènes (1 à 4) ont été clonés dont certains présentent des variants d'épissage. Leur activation par une acidification rapide du milieu extracellulaire génère un courant entrant transitoire essentiellement sodique accompagné pour certains types d'ASICs d'une phase soutenue. Les ASICs sont exprimés dans le système nerveux, central (SNC) et périphérique (SNP). On leur attribue un rôle dans l'apprentissage, la mémoire et l'ischémie cérébrale au niveau central ainsi que dans la nociception (douleur aiguë et inflammatoire) et la méchanotransduction au niveau périphérique. Toutefois, les données sont parfois contradictoires. Certaines études suggèrent qu'ils sont des senseurs primordiaux impliqués dans la détection de l'acidification et la douleur. D'autres études suggèrent plutôt qu'ils ont un rôle modulateur inhibiteur dans la douleur. De plus, le fait que leur activation génère majoritairement un courant transitoire alors que les fibres nerveuses impliquées dans la douleur répondent à un stimulus nocif avec une adaptation lente suggère que leurs propriétés doivent être modulés par des molécules endogènes. Dans une première partie de ma thèse, nous avons abordé la question de l'expression fonctionnelle des ASICs dans les neurones sensoriels primaires afférents du rat adulte pour clarifier le rôle des ASICs dans les neurones sensoriels. Nous avons caractérisé leurs propriétés biophysiques et pharmacologiques par la technique du patch-clamp en configuration « whole-cell ». Nous avons pu démontrer que près de 60% des neurones sensoriels de petit diamètre expriment des courants ASICs. Nous avons mis en évidence trois types de courant ASIC dans ces neurones. Les types 1 et 3 ont des propriétés compatibles avec un rôle de senseur du pH alors que le type 2 est majoritairement activé par des pH inférieurs à pH6. Le type 1 est médié par des homomers de la sous-unité ASIC1 a qui sont perméables aux Ca2+. Nous avons étudié leur co-expression avec des marqueurs des nocicepteurs ainsi que la possibilité d'induire une activité neuronale suite à une acidification qui soit dépendante des ASICs. Le but était d'associer un type de courant ASIC avec une fonction potentielle dans les neurones sensoriels. Une majorité des neurones exprimant les courants ASIC co-expriment des marqueurs des nocicepteurs. Toutefois, une plus grande proportion des neurones exprimant le type 1 n'est pas associée à la nociception par rapport aux types 2 et 3. Nous avons montré qu'il est possible d'induire des potentiels d'actions suite à une acidification. La probabilité d'induction est proportionnelle à la densité des courants ASIC et à l'acidité de la stimulation. Puis, nous avons utilisé cette classification comme un outil pour appréhender les potentielles modulations fonctionnelles des ASICs dans un model de neuropathie (spared nerve injury). Cette approche fut complétée par des expériences de «quantitative RT-PCR ». En situation de neuropathie, les courants ASIC sont dramatiquement changés au niveau de leur expression fonctionnelle et transcriptionnelle dans les neurones lésés ainsi que non-lésés. Dans une deuxième partie de ma thèse, suite au test de différentes substances sécrétées lors de l'inflammation et l'ischémie sur les propriétés des ASICs, nous avons caractérisé en détail la modulation des propriétés des courants ASICs notamment ASIC1 par les sérines protéases dans des systèmes d'expression recombinants ainsi que dans des neurones d'hippocampe. Nous avons montré que l'exposition aux sérine-protéases décale la dépendance au pH de l'activation ainsi que la « steady-state inactivation »des ASICs -1a et -1b vers des valeurs plus acidiques. Ainsi, l'exposition aux serine protéases conduit à une diminution du courant quand l'acidification a lieu à partir d'un pH7.4 et conduit à une augmentation du courant quand l'acidification alleu à partir d'un pH7. Nous avons aussi montré que cette régulation a lieu des les neurones d'hippocampe. Nos résultats dans les neurones sensoriels suggèrent que certains courants ASICs sont impliqués dans la transduction de l'acidification et de la douleur ainsi que dans une des phases du processus conduisant à la neuropathie. Une partie des courants de type 1 perméables au Ca 2+ peuvent être impliqués dans la neurosécrétion. La modulation par les sérines protéases pourrait expliquer qu'en situation d'acidose les canaux ASICs soient toujours activables. Résumé grand publique Les neurones sont les principales cellules du système nerveux. Le système nerveux est formé par le système nerveux central - principalement le cerveau, le cervelet et la moelle épinière - et le système nerveux périphérique -principalement les nerfs et les neurones sensoriels. Grâce à leur nombreux "bras" (les neurites), les neurones sont connectés entre eux, formant un véritable réseau de communication qui s'étend dans tout le corps. L'information se propage sous forme d'un phénomène électrique, l'influx nerveux (ou potentiels d'actions). A la base des phénomènes électriques dans les neurones il y a ce que l'on appelle les canaux ioniques. Un canal ionique est une sorte de tunnel qui traverse l'enveloppe qui entoure les cellules (la membrane) et par lequel passent les ions. La plupart de ces canaux sont normalement fermés et nécessitent d'être activés pour s'ouvrire et générer un influx nerveux. Les canaux ASICs sont activés par l'acidification et sont exprimés dans tout le système nerveux. Cette acidification a lieu notamment lors d'une attaque cérébrale (ischémie cérébrale) ou lors de l'inflammation. Les expériences sur les animaux ont montré que les canaux ASICs avaient entre autre un rôle dans la mort des neurones lors d'une attaque cérébrale et dans la douleur inflammatoire. Lors de ma thèse je me suis intéressé au rôle des ASICs dans la douleur et à l'influence des substances produites pendant l'inflammation sur leur activation par l'acidification. J'ai ainsi pu montrer chez le rat que la majorité des neurones sensoriels impliqués dans la douleur ont des canaux ASICs et que l'activation de ces canaux induit des potentiels d'action. Nous avons opéré des rats pour qu'ils présentent les symptômes d'une maladie chronique appelée neuropathie. La neuropathie se caractérise par une plus grande sensibilité à la douleur. Les rats neuropathiques présentent des changements de leurs canaux ASICs suggérant que ces canaux ont une peut-être un rôle dans la genèse ou les symptômes de cette maladie. J'ai aussi montré in vitro qu'un type d'enryme produit lors de l'inflammation et l'ischémie change les propriétés des ASICs. Ces résultats confirment un rôle des ASICs dans la douleur suggérant notamment un rôle jusque là encore non étudié dans la douleur neuropathique. De plus, ces résultats mettent en évidence une régulation des ASICs qui pourrait être importante si elle se confirmait in vivo de part les différents rôles des ASICs. Abstract Acid-sensing ion channels (ASICs) are members of the ENaC/Degenerin superfamily of ion channels. Their activation by a rapid extracellular acidification generates a transient and for some ASIC types also a sustained current mainly mediated by Na+. ASICs are expressed in the central (CNS) and in the peripheral (PNS) nervous system. In the CNS, ASICs have a putative role in learning, memory and in neuronal death after cerebral ischemia. In the PNS, ASICs have a putative role in nociception (acute and inflammatory pain) and in mechanotransduction. However, studies on ASIC function are somewhat controversial. Some studies suggest a crucial role of ASICs in transduction of acidification and in pain whereas other studies suggest rather a modulatory inhibitory role of ASICs in pain. Moreover, the basic property of ASICs, that they are activated only transiently is irreconcilable with the well-known property of nociception that the firing of nociceptive fibers demonstrated very little adaptation. Endogenous molecules may exist that can modulate ASIC properties. In a first part of my thesis, we addressed the question of the functional expression of ASICs in adult rat dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons. Our goal was to elucidate ASIC roles in DRG neurons. We characterized biophysical and pharmacological properties of ASIC currents using the patch-clamp technique in the whole-cell configuration. We observed that around 60% of small-diameter sensory neurons express ASICs currents. We described in these neurons three ASIC current types. Types 1 and 3 have properties compatible with a role of pH-sensor whereas type 2 is mainly activated by pH lower than pH6. Type 1 is mediated by ASIC1a homomultimers which are permeable to Ca 2+. We studied ASIC co-expression with nociceptor markers. The goal was to associate an ASIC current type with a potential function in sensory neurons. Most neurons expressing ASIC currents co-expressed nociceptor markers. However, a higher proportion of the neurons expressing type 1 was not associated with nociception compared to type 2 and -3. We completed this approach with current-clamp measurements of acidification-induced action potentials (APs). We showed that activation of ASICs in small-diameter neurons can induce APs. The probability of AP induction is positively correlated with the ASIC current density and the acidity of stimulation. Then, we used this classification as a tool to characterize the potential functional modulation of ASICs in the spared nerve injury model of neuropathy. This approach was completed by quantitative RT-PCR experiments. ASICs current expression was dramatically changed at the functional and transcriptional level in injured and non-injured small-diameter DRG neurons. In a second part of my thesis, following an initial screening of the effect of various substances secreted during inflammation and ischemia on ASIC current properties, we characterized in detail the modulation of ASICs, in particular of ASIC1 by serine proteases in a recombinant expression system as well as in hippocampal neurons. We showed that protease exposure shifts the pH dependence of ASIC1 activation and steady-state inactivation to more acidic pH. As a consequence, protease exposure leads to a decrease in the current response if ASIC1 is activated by a pH drop from pH 7.4. If, however, acidification occurs from a basal pH of 7, protease-exposed ASIC1a shows higher activity than untreated ASIC1a. We provided evidence that this bi-directional regulation of ASIC1a function also occurs in hippocampal neurons. Our results in DRG neurons suggest that some ASIC currents are involved in the transduction of peripheral acidification and pain. Furthermore, ASICs may participate to the processes leading to neuropathy. Some Ca 2+-permeable type 1 currents may be involved in neurosecretion. ASIC modulation by serine proteases may be physiologically relevant, allowing ASIC activation under sustained slightly acidic conditions.
Resumo:
Electrical deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an efficient method to treat movement disorders. Many models of DBS, based mostly on finite elements, have recently been proposed to better understand the interaction between the electrical stimulation and the brain tissues. In monopolar DBS, clinically widely used, the implanted pulse generator (IPG) is used as reference electrode (RE). In this paper, the influence of the RE model of monopolar DBS is investigated. For that purpose, a finite element model of the full electric loop including the head, the neck and the superior chest is used. Head, neck and superior chest are made of simple structures such as parallelepipeds and cylinders. The tissues surrounding the electrode are accurately modelled from data provided by the diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DT-MRI). Three different configurations of RE are compared with a commonly used model of reduced size. The electrical impedance seen by the DBS system and the potential distribution are computed for each model. Moreover, axons are modelled to compute the area of tissue activated by stimulation. Results show that these indicators are influenced by the surface and position of the RE. The use of a RE model corresponding to the implanted device rather than the usually simplified model leads to an increase of the system impedance (+48%) and a reduction of the area of activated tissue (-15%).
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Allodynia (pain in response to normally non painful stimulation) and paresthesia (erroneous sensory experience) are two debilitating symptoms of neuropathic pain. These stem, at least partly, from profound changes in the non-nociceptive sensory pathway that comprises large myelinated neuronal afferents terminating in the gracile and cuneate nuclei. Further than neuronal changes, well admitted evidence indicates that glial cells (especially in the spinal cord) are key actors in neuropathic pain, in particular the possible alteration in astrocytic capacity to reuptake neurotransmitters (glutamate and GABA). Yet, the possibility of such a changed astrocytic scavenging capacity remains unexplored in the dorsal column pathway. The present study was therefore undertaken to assess whether peripheral nerve injury (spared nerve injury model, SNI) could trigger a glial reaction, and especially changes in glutamate and GABA transporters, in the gracile nucleus. SNI surgery was performed on male Sprague-Dawley rats. Seven days after surgery, rats were used for immunofluorescence (fixation and brain slicing), western-blot (fresh brain freezing and protein extraction) or GABA reuptake on synaptosomes. We found that SNI results in a profound glial reaction in the ipsilateral gracile nucleus. This reaction was characterized by an enhanced immunolabelling for microglial marker Iba1 as well as astrocytic protein GFAP (further confirmed by western-blot, p <0.05, n = 7). These changes were not observed in sham animals. Immunofluorescence and western-blot analysis shows that the GABA transporter GAT-1 is upregulated in the ipsilateral gracile nucleus (p <0.001; n = 7), with no detectable change in GAT-3 or glutamate transporters EAAT-1 and EAAT-2. Double immunoflurescence shows that GAT-1 and GFAP colocalize within the same cells. Furthermore, the upregulation of GFAP and GAT-1 were shown to occur all along the rostrocaudal axis of the gracile nucleus. Finally, synaptosomes from ipsilateral gracile nucleus show an increased capacity to reuptake GABA. Together, the data presented herein show that glial cells in the gracile nucleus react to neuropathic lesion, in particular through an upregulation of the GABA transporter GAT-1. Hence, this study points to role of an increased GABA transport in the dorsal column nuclei in neuropathic pain, calling attention to GAT-1 as a putative future pharmacological target to treat allodynia and paresthesia.
Resumo:
Chronic pain refractory to medical therapy poses a therapeutic challenge. The repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) and transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) modulate brain activity offering a new approach. Current evidence suggests a potential therapeutic efficacy of motor cortex stimulation for the treatment of pain, but does not (yet) support their recommendation for clinical practice. These methods allow to deepen our knowledge in the pathophysiology of chronic pain while providing new therapeutic approaches.
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The Munc13 gene family encodes molecules located at the synaptic active zone that regulate the reliability of synapses to encode information over a wide range of frequencies in response to action potentials. In the CNS, proteins of the Munc13 family are critical in regulating neurotransmitter release and synaptic plasticity. Although Munc13-1 is essential for synaptic transmission, it is paradoxical that Munc13-2 and Munc13-3 are functionally dispensable at some synapses, although their loss in other synapses leads to increases in frequency-dependent facilitation. We addressed this issue at the calyx of Held synapse, a giant glutamatergic synapse that we found to express all these Munc13 isoforms. We studied their roles in the regulation of synaptic transmission and their impact on the reliability of information transfer. Through detailed electrophysiological analyses of Munc13-2, Munc13-3, and Munc13-2-3 knock-out and wild-type mice, we report that the combined loss of Munc13-2 and Munc13-3 led to an increase in the rate of calcium-dependent recovery and a change in kinetics of release of the readily releasable pool. Furthermore, viral-mediated overexpression of a dominant-negative form of Munc13-1 at the calyx demonstrated that these effects are Munc13-1 dependent. Quantitative immunohistochemistry using Munc13-fluorescent protein knock-in mice revealed that Munc13-1 is the most highly expressed Munc13 isoform at the calyx and the only one highly colocalized with Bassoon at the active zone. Based on these data, we conclude that Munc13-2 and Munc13-3 isoforms limit the ability of Munc13-1 to regulate calcium-dependent replenishment of readily releasable pool and slow pool to fast pool conversion in central synapses.
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An ideal substitute to treat a nerve gap has not been found. Initially, silicone conduits were employed. Later, conduits were fabricated from collagen or polyesters carbonates. More recently, it has been shown that a bioresorbable material, poly-3-hydroxybutyrate (PHB), can enhance nerve repair. The present investigation shows the use of fibrin as a conduit to guide nerve regeneration and bridge nerve defects. In this study we prepared and investigated a novel nerve conduit made from fibrin glue. Using a rodent sciatic nerve injury model (10-mm gap), we compared the extent of nerve regeneration through the new fibrin conduits versus established PHB conduits. After 2 and 4 weeks, conduits containing proximal and distal stumps were harvested. We evaluated the initial axon and Schwann cell stimulation using immunohistochemistry. The conduits presented full tissue integration and were completely intact. Axons crossed the gap after 1 month. Immunohistochemistry using the axonal marker PGP 9.5 showed a superior nerve regeneration distance in the fibrin conduit compared with PHB (4.1 mm versus 1.9 mm). Schwann cell intrusion (S100 staining) was similarly enhanced in the fibrin conduits, both from the proximal (4.2 mm versus 2.1 mm) and distal ends (3.2 mm versus 1.7 mm). These findings suggest an advantage of the new fibrin conduit for the important initial phase of peripheral nerve regeneration. The use of fibrin glue as a conduit is a step toward a usable graft to bridge peripheral nerve lesions. This might be clinically interesting, given the widespread acceptance of fibrin glue among the surgical community.
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One of the greatest conundrums to the contemporary science is the relation between consciousness and brain activity, and one of the specifi c questions is how neural activity can generate vivid subjective experiences. Studies focusing on visual consciousness have become essential in solving the empirical questions of consciousness. Th e main aim of this thesis is to clarify the relation between visual consciousness and the neural and electrophysiological processes of the brain. By applying electroencephalography and functional magnetic resonance image-guided transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), we investigated the links between conscious perception and attention, the temporal evolution of visual consciousness during stimulus processing, the causal roles of primary visual cortex (V1), visual area 2 (V2) and lateral occipital cortex (LO) in the generation of visual consciousness and also the methodological issues concerning the accuracy of targeting TMS to V1. Th e results showed that the fi rst eff ects of visual consciousness on electrophysiological responses (about 140 ms aft er the stimulus-onset) appeared earlier than the eff ects of selective attention, and also in the unattended condition, suggesting that visual consciousness and selective attention are two independent phenomena which have distinct underlying neural mechanisms. In addition, while it is well known that V1 is necessary for visual awareness, the results of the present thesis suggest that also the abutting visual area V2 is a prerequisite for conscious perception. In our studies, the activation in V2 was necessary for the conscious perception of change in contrast for a shorter period of time than in the case of more detailed conscious perception. We also found that TMS in LO suppressed the conscious perception of object shape when TMS was delivered in two distinct time windows, the latter corresponding with the timing of the ERPs related to the conscious perception of coherent object shape. Th e result supports the view that LO is crucial in conscious perception of object coherency and is likely to be directly involved in the generation of visual consciousness. Furthermore, we found that visual sensations, or phosphenes, elicited by the TMS of V1 were brighter than identically induced phosphenes arising from V2. Th ese fi ndings demonstrate that V1 contributes more to the generation of the sensation of brightness than does V2. Th e results also suggest that top-down activation from V2 to V1 is probably associated with phosphene generation. The results of the methodological study imply that when a commonly used landmark (2 cm above the inion) is used in targeting TMS to V1, the TMS-induced electric fi eld is likely to be highest in dorsal V2. When V1 was targeted according to the individual retinotopic data, the electric fi eld was highest in V1 only in half of the participants. Th is result suggests that if the objective is to study the role of V1 with TMS methodology, at least functional maps of V1 and V2 should be applied with computational model of the TMS-induced electric fi eld in V1 and V2. Finally, the results of this thesis imply that diff erent features of attention contribute diff erently to visual consciousness, and thus, the theoretical model which is built up of the relationship between visual consciousness and attention should acknowledge these diff erences. Future studies should also explore the possibility that visual consciousness consists of several processing stages, each of which have their distinct underlying neural mechanisms.
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The presence of inhibitory nonadrenergic noncholinergic (NANC) intrinsic innervation of the circular muscle of the gastrointestinal sphincters of the South American (SA) opossum was investigated in vitro. Isolated circular muscle strips from the esophagogastric and ileocolonic junctions but not from the gastroduodenal (pylorus) region developed spontaneous tension. Tetrodotoxin (TTX, 1 µM) augmented the spontaneous tension only in the ileocolonic junction strips. Electrical field stimulation of esophagogastric and ileocolonic junction strips caused frequency-dependent responses consisting of a relaxation at lower frequencies (<1 Hz) and a biphasic response or contraction at higher frequencies. In the strips from the pyloric region electrical field stimulation abolished the spontaneous activity at lower frequencies and induced contractions at higher frequencies. The responses elicited by electrical field stimulation in the three sphincters were abolished by TTX (1 µM). Electrical field-induced contractions were reduced while relaxations were enhanced by atropine (1 µM). In the presence of atropine (1 µM) and guanethidine (3 µM), electrical field stimulation, nicotine and ATP induced frequency- or concentration-dependent relaxations of the three sphincters that were abolished by TTX (1 µM). Isoproterenol and sodium nitroprusside caused concentration-dependent relaxations which were TTX-resistant. These findings indicate that the sphincteric circular muscle of the SA opossum gastrointestinal tract is relaxed by the activation of intrinsic NANC nerves and therefore can be used as a model for the study of the mechanisms involved in these responses
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The main generator source of a longitudinal muscle contraction was identified as an M (mechanical-stimulus-sensitive) circuit composed of a presynaptic M-1 neuron and a postsynaptic M-2 neuron in the ventral nerve cord of the earthworm, Amynthas hawayanus, by simultaneous intracellular response recording and Lucifer Yellow-CH injection with two microelectrodes. Five-peaked responses were evoked in both neurons by a mechanical, but not by an electrical, stimulus to the mechanoreceptor in the shaft of a seta at the opposite side of an epidermis-muscle-nerve-cord preparation. This response was correlated to 84% of the amplitude, 73% of the rising rate and 81% of the duration of a longitudinal muscle contraction recorded by a mechano-electrical transducer after eliminating the other possible generator sources by partitioning the epidermis-muscle piece of this preparation. The pre- and postsynaptic relationship between these two neurons was determined by alternately stimulating and recording with two microelectrodes. Images of the Lucifer Yellow-CH-filled M-1 and M-2 neurons showed that both of them are composed of bundles of longitudinal processes situated on the side of the nerve cord opposite to stimulation. The M-1 neuron has an afferent process (A1) in the first nerve at the stimulated side of this preparation and the M-2 neuron has two efferent processes (E1 and E3) in the first and third nerves at the recording side where their effector muscle cell was identified by a third microelectrode.
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Optical tracers in conjunction with fluorescence microscopy have become widely used to follow the movement of synaptic vesicles in nerve terminals. The present review discusses the use of these optical methods to understand the regulation of exocytosis and endocytosis of synaptic vesicles. The maintenance of neurotransmission depends on the constant recycling of synaptic vesicles and important insights have been gained by visualization of vesicles with the vital dye FM1-43. A number of questions related to the control of recycling of synaptic vesicles by prolonged stimulation and the role of calcium to control membrane internalization are now being addressed. It is expected that optical monitoring of presynaptic activity coupled to appropriate genetic models will contribute to the understanding of membrane traffic in synaptic terminals.
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Estragole, a relatively nontoxic terpenoid ether, is an important constituent of many essential oils with widespread applications in folk medicine and aromatherapy and known to have potent local anesthetic activity. We investigated the effects of estragole on the compound action potential (CAP) of the rat sciatic nerve. The experiments were carried out on sciatic nerves dissected from Wistar rats. Nerves, mounted in a moist chamber, were stimulated at a frequency of 0.2 Hz, with electric pulses of 50-100-µs duration at 10-20 V, and evoked CAP were monitored on an oscilloscope and recorded on a computer. CAP control parameters were: peak-to-peak amplitude (PPA), 9.9 ± 0.55 mV (N = 15), conduction velocity, 92.2 ± 4.36 m/s (N = 15), chronaxy, 45.6 ± 3.74 µs (N = 5), and rheobase, 3.9 ± 0.78 V (N = 5). Estragole induced a dose-dependent blockade of the CAP. At 0.6 mM, estragole had no demonstrable effect. At 2.0 and 6.0 mM estragole, PPA was significantly reduced at the end of 180-min exposure of the nerve to the drug to 85.6 ± 3.96 and 13.04 ± 1.80% of control, respectively. At 4.0 mM, estragole significantly altered PPA, conduction velocity, chronaxy, and rheobase (P <= 0.05, ANOVA; N = 5) to 49.3 ± 6.21 and 77.7 ± 3.84, 125.9 ± 10.43 and 116.7 ± 4.59%, of control, respectively. All of these effects developed slowly and were reversible upon a 300-min wash-out. The data show that estragole dose-dependently blocks nerve excitability.
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The effects of a brief jet of water delivered to the anterior portion of body-head on the heart rate of Megalobulimus mogianensis were determined in a group of intact snails (N = 8), previously prepared for electrocardiogram recording. The heart rate was significantly increased following stimulation. Nevertheless, with repetition of the stimulus there was a significant decrease in the magnitude of the heart rate variation and in the time for the basal heart rate to recover (first stimulus, 7.4 ± 1.2 bpm and 15.5 ± 1.8 min; second stimulus, 4.8 ± 1.0 bpm and 10.6 ± 1.5 min; third stimulus, 5.0 ± 0.3 bpm and 11.1 ± 1.8 min), indicating that this behavioral response undergoes early habituation. To determine the role of the cardiac nerve in mediating the heart rate alterations induced by the jet of water two other groups were tested: denervated animals (N = 8) and sham-operated control animals (N = 8). Although the innocuous stimulus caused the heart rate to increase significantly in both experimental groups, the mean increase in heart rate in denervated animals (3.2 ± 0.4 bpm) was 41% of the value obtained in sham-operated animals (7.8 ± 1.5 bpm), indicating that the cardiac nerve is responsible for 59% of the cardioacceleration induced by the innocuous stimulus. The increase in heart rate observed in denervated animals may be due to an increase in venous return promoted by the intense muscular activity associated with the retraction-protraction of the anterior part of the body induced by the jet of water.