Large Unresponsive Zones Appear in Cat Somatosensory Cortex
Immediately After Ulnar Nerve Cut
Cheng-Xiang Li, Robert S Waters, Akinniran Oladehin, Eldridge
F Johnson, Carl A McCandlish and Robert W Dykes

Abstract:
The organization of the primary somatosensory cortex
innervated by the ulnar nerve was studied before and immediately
after ulnar nerve transection in 11 cats electrophysiologically
mapped under Nembutal or Ketamine anesthesia. The cortex was
reexamined a second time beginning 42 hr after nerve transection
in four cats anesthetized with Nembutal. One additional sham-operated
control was also mapped. The region of cortex formerly served
by the ulnar nerve remained largely unresponsive to somatic
stimulation independent of the type of anesthetic used during
recording. Nonetheless, animals anesthetized with Ketamine had
more new responsive sites in deafferented cortex following nerve
cut than cats anesthetized with Nembutal. New responses, when
observed, were evoked by stimulation of a region of skin adjacent
to the region served by the ulnar nerve. These findings suggest
that the immediate response to deafferentation of somatosensory
cortex is a limited acquisition of novel responses restricted
to a region immediately adjacent to cortex containing normal
afferent input.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1994; 21: 233-247
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