Ch. Hubscher et Rd. Johnson, Effects of acute and chronic midthoracic spinal cord injury on neural circuits for male sexual function. I. Ascending pathways, J NEUROPHYS, 82(3), 1999, pp. 1381-1389
Normal male reproductive function, particularly ejaculation, requires the i
ntegrity of urogenital sensory input and its ascending spinal projections.
After midthoracic chronic spinal cord injury, sexual dysfunction occurs in
both rats and humans. Neurons in the medullary reticular formation (MRF) ar
e involved in the processing of bilaterally convergent sensory inputs from
multiple cutaneous, mucocutaneous, and visceral regions of the body, includ
ing the penis and male urogenital tract. A variety of acute and chronic les
ions were used to determine the midthoracic location of ascending spinal pa
thways conveying sensory input from the penis and male urogenital tract to
MRF. A total of 371 single neurons were recorded in the MRF of 34 urethan-a
nesthetized mature male rats. Twenty-seven rats received a chronic T-8 dors
al (DHx) or lateral (LHx) hemisection or contusion (Cx) injury 30 days befo
re the terminal electrophysiological experiments. In addition, nine dorsal
nerve of the penis (DNP)responsive MRF neurons in seven intact control anim
als were tested completely both before and after various select acute spina
l cord lesions. The chronic lesion data indicate that low and high threshol
d input from the penis (mucocutaneous) and male urogenital tract (visceral)
ascend bilaterally within the dorsal quadrant at T-8 as opposed to high th
reshold input from the hindpaws (cutaneous), which ascends unilaterally in
the ventrolateral quadrant (VLQ). The acute lesion data indicate that the l
ow-threshold information conveyed from the penis and male urogenital tract
ascends in the dorsal columns, as opposed to the high-threshold nociceptive
inputs that ascend bilaterally in the dorsolateral quadrant (DLQ). These r
esults, as well as previous data on ascending projections from female repro
ductive organs within the dorsal columns and DLQ to other caudal brain stem
nuclei, provide evidence for ascending pathways conveying nociceptive info
rmation centrally via the DLQ. This spinal gray-DLQ pathway(s) conveying in
formation from mucocutaneous/pelvic/visceral territories therefore differs
from the traditionally recognized spinal gray-VLQ pathway(s), which is know
n to convey nociceptive information from cutaneous regions of the body.