Kainic Acid Lesions to the Lateral Tegmental
Field of Medulla: Effects on Cough, Expiration and Aspiration Reflexes in
Anesthetized Cats
J. Jakuš, A. Stránsky, I. Poliaček, H. Baráni, Ľ. Bošeľová1
Department of Biophysics and 1Department of Histology and
Embryology, Jessenius Faculty of Medicine, Comenius University, Martin, Slovak
Republic
Received October 3, 1999
Accepted December 10, 1999
Summary
We have tested the hypothesis that neurons of both the
ventral reticular nucleus and the adjacent parts of the lateral tegmental field
(LTF) may be important for the production of motor programs associated with
cough, expiration and aspiration reflexes. Our studies were conducted on non-decerebrate,
spontaneously breathing cats under pentobarbitone anesthesia. Dysfunction of the medullary LTF region above the obex, produced by uni- or bilateral injections of kainic acid (a neurotoxin), regularly abolished the cough reflex evoked by
mechanical stimulation of both the tracheobronchial and laryngeal regions and in
most cases also the expiration reflex induced from the glottal area. However,
some electrical activity still occurred in the neurogram of the recurrent
laryngeal nerve during probing the laryngeal and glottal regions. Interestingly,
the aspiration reflex elicited from the nasopharynx regularly persisted,
although with lower intensity after the LTF lesion. Nevertheless, successive midcollicular decerebration performed in four cats also abolished the aspiration
reflex. These experiments demonstrate the importance of medullary LTF neurons
for the normal occurrence of cough and expiration reflexes. One possible
explanation for the elimination of these expulsive processes is that the
blockade of the LTF neurons may remove an important source of a facilitatory
input to the brainstem circuitries that mediate cough and expiration reflexes.
In addition, the potential importance of the mesencephalic reticular formation
for the occurrence of the aspiration reflex and the role of the LTF in
modulating both the eupnoeic breathing and the blood pressure are also
discussed.
Key words
Lateral tegmental field of the medulla ·
Cough · Expiration and aspiration reflexes · Kainic acid lesions · Midbrain transections ·
Cat
Reprint requests
Doc. MUDr. Ján Jakuš, DrSc., Department of Biophysics, Jessenius Faculty of Medicine, Comenius University, Malá Hora 4, 037 54 Martin,
Slovak Republic. E-mail: jakus@dean4.jfmed.uniba.sk
|