Spinal Pathway of the Milk-Ejection Reflex in the Rat
- 1 February 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Biology of Reproduction
- Vol. 30 (1) , 74-81
- https://doi.org/10.1095/biolreprod30.1.74
Abstract
The effects of lesions of the spinal cord on the milk-ejection reflex evoked by suckling were studied in urethane-anesthetized lactating rats. All lesions were made between C6 and C7 vertebrae and milk ejection was monitored by recording intramammary pressure. In the 1st experiment on the rats with bilateral lesions, a 3-h suckling test with 5 pups on each side was performed. Eleven (84.6%) of 13 rats with the section of the dorsal funiculus (Group 2), and 12 (85.7%) of 14 rats with the combined section of the dorsal and ventral funiculi (Group 4) displayed regular milk ejection. The incidence of milk ejection in both groups was not significantly different from 81.8% (9 rats) of the 11 sham-operated rats (Group 1). In contrast, none of the 12 rats with bilateral section of the lateral funiculus (Group 3) displayed milk ejection and the incidence of milk ejection was significantly lower than that in Group 1. In the 2nd experiment on the rats with unilateral section of the lateral funiculus, bilateral suckling with 10 pups (5 pups on each side) and unilateral suckling (both ipsilateral and contralateral to the lesion) with 5 pups were consecutively performed in the 10 rats. Milk ejection was induced in 50% by contralateral suckling and in 100% by bilateral suckling, and the incidence was significantly higher than that (0%) observed during ipsilateral suckling. A significant difference in the incidence of milk ejection was also observed between contralateral and bilateral sucklings. In the 5 rats which displayed milk ejection during contralateral suckling, a significant increase in the amplitude of milk ejection was observed during bilateral suckling. The spinal pathway for the milk-ejection reflex in the rat ascends in the lateral funiculus, mainly in an ipsilateral manner and partly in a contralateral manner. The dorsal column-lemniscal system does not seem to play any role in either the occurrence or the timing of the milk-ejection reflex.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- MESENCEPHALIC AREAS CONTROLLING PULSATILE OXYTOCIN RELEASE IN THE SUCKLED RATJournal of Endocrinology, 1981
- The role of central adrenergic receptors in the reflex release of oxytocinBrain Research, 1978
- NEURAL PATHWAYS IN LACTATION1956