Slowly conducting afferents activated by innocuous low temperature in human skin

Citation
M. Campero et al., Slowly conducting afferents activated by innocuous low temperature in human skin, J PHYSL LON, 535(3), 2001, pp. 855-865
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Physiology
Journal title
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
ISSN journal
00223751 → ACNP
Volume
535
Issue
3
Year of publication
2001
Pages
855 - 865
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3751(20010915)535:3<855:SCAABI>2.0.ZU;2-6
Abstract
1. Microneurography was used to search for primary afferents responsive to innocuous low temperature in human nerves supplying the hairy skin of the h and or foot. Eighteen units were identified as cold-specific units: they di splayed a steady-state discharge at skin temperatures in the range 28-30 de greesC, they were sensitive to small changes in temperature, and they respo nded vigorously when a cool metal probe touched their receptive fields (RFS ). They were insensitive to mechanical stimuli and sympathetic activation. Their RFs comprised one, or at most two, spots less than 5 mm in diameter. 2. Nine units were characterised in detail by a series of 10 s cooling and warming pulses from a holding temperature of 35 degreesC. The threshold tem perature for activation by cooling was 29.4 +/- 2.0 degreesC (mean +/- S.D. ). Adaptation of the responses to supra-threshold cooling pulses was partia l: mean peak and plateau firing rates were maximal on steps to 15 degreesC (35.9 and 19.9 impulses s(-1), respectively). Three of these units also dis played a paradoxical response to warming, with a mean threshold of 42.3 deg reesC. 3. Sixteen of the eighteen cold-specific units were also studied by electri cal stimulation of their RFs. They conducted in the velocity range 0.8-3.0 m s(-1). When stimulated at 2 Hz, their latency increased according to a ch aracteristic time course, reaching a plateau within 3 min (mean slowing (+/ -S.D.) 5.2 +/- 1.1 %) and recovering quickly (50 % recovery in 17.8 +/- 4.5 s). 4. To reconcile these findings with previous studies of reaction times and the effects of nerve compression on sensation, it is concluded that either human cold-specific afferent fibres are incompletely myelinated 'BC' fibres , or else there are C as well as A delta cold fibres, with the C fibre grou p contributing little to sensation.