W. Grewe et al., EFFECTS OF HYPOTHALAMIC THERMAL STIMULI ON SYMPATHETIC NEURONS INNERVATING SKIN AND SKELETAL-MUSCLE OF THE CAT HINDLIMB, Journal of physiology, 488(1), 1995, pp. 139-152
1. Postganglionic neurones supplying hairless and hairy skin of the ca
t hindlimb were analysed for their responses to thermal stimuli applie
d to the anterior hypothalamus and spinal cord in anaesthetized and ar
tificially ventilated cats. Activity was recorded from multi- and sing
le-unit bundles which were isolated from peripheral nerves. The neuron
es were functionally identified as cutaneous vasoconstrictor (CVC) and
muscle vasoconstrictor (MVC) neurones. Activity in sudomotor (SM) neu
rones was either monitored indirectly by recording the phasic negative
deflections of the skin potential from the surface of the hairless sk
in, or in some experiments additionally by recording activity directly
from the SM axons. 2. The activity in forty-one out of forty-four mul
ti-unit and six out of six single-unit CVC bundles was inhibited, in a
graded manner, by hypothalamic warming. Bn increase in the temperatur
e of the surface of hairless skin followed the decrease in activity of
the CVC! neurones supplying it. Large changes in skin temperature onl
y followed decreases in CVC activity of more than 40%. Cooling of the
hypothalamus had only weak transient effects on CVC neurones. 3. Simul
taneous warming of hypothalamus and spinal cord had multiplicative eff
ects on the activity in CVC neurones. Subthreshold warming of one stru
cture increased the response to warming of the other one and reduced t
he threshold temperature. 4. SM neurones were not affected by hypothal
amic warming, but activated during hypothalamic cooling. 5. MVC neuron
es were weakly activated during hypothalamic warming only if arterial
blood pressure decreased, otherwise they were unaffected. It is likely
that this activation was due to secondary unloading of arterial baror
eceptors. 6. Two silent postganglionic neurones projecting to skin wer
e activated during hypothalamic warming. These neurones may have had a
vasodilatory function. 7. Rhythmicity of the activity in CVC neurones
, related to the cycle of artificial ventilation, increased during hyp
othalamic warming whereas that of MVC neurones was unchanged. 8. The f
unctionally highly specific responses to hypothalamic warming in CVC n
eurones indicate a pathway from the hypothalamus that is specific for
CVC neurones, in contrast to MVC and SM neurones. This central pathway
is integrated with other spinal and supraspinal reflex pathways that
determine the characteristic reflex pattern of CVC neurones to somatic
and visceral stimuli and possibly with pathways that generate other p
hysiological changes during hypothalamic warming (e.g. increase in res
piratory drive).